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Searching In features, blog entries, column entries & news items, Under the topic Other Topics
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Largely ignored so far, dietary boron may play important roles in preventing diseases such as arthritis and prostate cancer. (p. 228)Published: April 14th, 2001; Vol.159 #15Found in: Nutrition -
Like toy cars chasing each other on a looped racetrack, three stars can, in principle, trace out a figure-eight orbit in space. This newly discovered, mathematically surprising pattern of motion arises from the force of gravity acting on three bodies of equal mass. Their movements are timed so that each body in turn passes between the other two.Newton’s laws provide a precise answer to the problem of determining the motion of two bodies under the influence of gravity. If the solar system consisted of the sun and a single planet, for example, the planet would follow an elliptical orbit. When th...Published: Friday, April 6th, 2001Found in: Numbers -
Like toy cars chasing each other on a looped racetrack, three stars can, in principle, trace out a figure-eight orbit in space. This newly discovered, mathematically surprising pattern of motion arises from the force of gravity acting on three bodies of equal mass. Their movements are timed so that each body in turn passes between the other two.Newton’s laws provide a precise answer to the problem of determining the motion of two bodies under the influence of gravity. If the solar system consisted of the sun and a single planet, for example, the planet would follow an elliptical orbit. When th...Published: Friday, April 6th, 2001Found in: Numbers -
A new optical tool allows physicians to scout for precancerous tissue by analyzing the fluorescent responses of cells when light is shone on them. (p. 214)Published: April 7th, 2001; Vol.159 #14Found in: Technology
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As they head for the stomach from the mouth, the carbohydrates in vegetables, breads, fruits, and candy all begin breaking down into simple sugars. According to some studies, carbs with a low glycemic index (GI)—meaning that they are digested slowly—reduce a person’s risk of heart disease and obesity through an as yet unidentified mechanism linked to their effects on insulin (SN: 4/8/00, p. 236). Such low-GI fare may also offer protection against colon cancer, new research finds.Insulin shepherds sugar into cells. The more sugar that’s deposited into the bloodstream at one time, the more insul...Published: Monday, April 2nd, 2001Found in: Nutrition
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Computer programs can handle all sorts of data, from sums of money in bank accounts to sensor readings from scientific instruments. In many cases, the data are a set of discrete elements, such as temperatures. Moreover, some elements of a set may be larger in value than others, or they may exhibit some other relationship that allows you to rank them or put them in order.In mathematics, such a collection of elements is known as a partially ordered set, or poset. One example of a poset consists of an integer and all its positive divisors (excluding 1). For instance, the positive divisors of 42 a...Published: Friday, March 30th, 2001Found in: Numbers
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Make no mistake: Chocolate is not a health food. Indeed, most portions are loaded with empty calories from sugar and saturated fats.Several studies in recent years, however, have demonstrated that among sweets, chocolate may possess a few nutritional advantages over most calorie-rich alternatives. The latest of these good-news findings is a report that milk chocolate contains tiny amounts of conjugated linoleic acid, or CLA—a relatively low-profile fat that has been winning some big kudos.Most trans fats—ones containing a structural feature that make them solid at room temperature—have a bad r...Published: Monday, March 26th, 2001Found in: Nutrition -
Anyone who has waited for a bus in the city has probably casually observed that, after an inordinately long wait, two or three buses often come along at the same time.The question of why such bunching seems to happen has prompted all sorts of speculation. Some claim that bus bunching is actually a rare occurrence, but passengers tend to forget the much larger number of times when a single bus arrives. Others posit that bus drivers simply like to travel in packs.Mathematical models that simulate traffic flow confirm that bus bunching is a real phenomenon. Even though buses leave their depot at...Published: Thursday, March 22nd, 2001Found in: Numbers -
An international team of researchers has identified a protein that helps compounds in some vegetables prevent cancer. (p. 182)Published: March 24th, 2001; Vol.159 #12Found in: Nutrition -
Researchers have made a device that can differentiate nearly identical DNA molecules, which might lead to sequencing at unprecedented speeds. (p. 180)Published: March 24th, 2001; Vol.159 #12Found in: Technology -
Home / Blogs / Food for Thought / Food for Thought : Soy slashes cancer-fostering hormones (with recipe)Asian women tend to have much lower breast-cancer rates than their Western counterparts--unless they move to Europe or North America. Then the cancer’s incidence in these women begins to match local norms.This observation has suggested that something about the Western way of life, probably diet, promotes cancer--or that something about Eastern diets inhibits the development of breast malignancies. Strong support for the latter comes from a recent study by researchers at the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston and Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, Israel.The study showed tha...Published: Monday, March 19th, 2001Found in: Nutrition
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Seemingly simple games can serve as thought-provoking exercises in mathematical logic. They can provide deep insights into subtle issues that confront logicians who are interested in the foundations of mathematics.So-called Ehrenfeucht games have proved particularly useful for tackling certain aspects of mathematical logic. They were developed in the 1960s by Andrzej Ehrenfeucht, who is now a computer science professor at the University of Colorado in Boulder.Ehrenfeucht games can also be studied for their own sake as interesting and often surprisingly subtle games, an approach adopted by Caro...Published: Thursday, March 15th, 2001Found in: Numbers
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Twelve years ago, scientists uncovered a mechanism to explain why the folk remedy of eating cranberries fights urinary tract infections. It now appears that the medicinal powers of the pucker-inducing berries might extend to breast cancer as well.For years, Najla Guthrie and her colleagues at the University of Western Ontario in London have been exploring anticancer prospects of flavonoids, natural antioxidants, isolated from citrus juices (SN: 5/4/96, p. 287). Because deeply pigmented berries also contain dozens of such compounds--several with suspected anticancer activity--Guthrie recently t...Published: Monday, March 12th, 2001Found in: Nutrition -
The curiously looping movements of the planets relative to the stars have presented all sorts of puzzles to keen, patient observers of the night sky.In 1601, Johannes Kepler (1571-1630) undertook the challenge of deciphering the orbit of Mars and developing a mathematical theory of its motion to fit observations of the planet's changing position in the sky. In assuming that Earth itself traveled around the sun, Kepler's immediate hurdle was to find a way to disentangle Mars' motion from that of Earth. He then faced the daunting task of choosing an appropriate geometry for the two planetary orb...Published: Monday, March 5th, 2001Found in: Numbers
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Some people undertake seemingly impossible tasks without frustration, while others become anxious or depressed. A Dutch study now finds that the latter individuals might cope with pressure better if they tailored their diet to fuel the brain with more tryptophan.The brain uses this essential amino acid, a building block of many proteins, to fashion serotonin,a mood-enhancing neurotransmitter.Neuropsychologist C. Rob Markus of the TNO Nutrition and Food Research Institute in Zeist, the Netherlands, and his colleagues identified a milk-derived protein--alpha-lactalbumin--thatis unusually rich in...Published: Monday, March 5th, 2001Found in: Nutrition
