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Updated Thu, February 2, 2012.
451.www.wodc.nl85200
452.www.cedex.es85000
453.www.wiso.uni-koeln.de84900
454.www.leica-geosystems.com84700
455.www.zeiss.de84300
456.spaceflight.nasa.gov84100
457.www.let.uu.nl84100
458.science.discovery.com83900
459.www.cos.com83900
460.www.biotoday.com83200
461.www.anl.gov83100
462.www.vialattea.net83100
463.www.standard.no82600
464.www.botanical-online.com81900
465.www.iac.es81600
466.www.afftis.or.jp81200
467.www.nao.ac.jp81100
468.www.iao.fraunhofer.de81100
469.www.nalusda.gov80900
470.www.solarviews.com80100
471.socionics.org79900
472.www.wolframscience.com79800
473.www.math.com79600
474.www.paleoportal.org79200
475.www.kemikalieberedskab.dk79100
476.www.nupi.no79000
477.www.hec.unil.ch78700
478.www.jpl.nasa.gov78600
479.www.matheplanet.com78400
480.www.archaeology.org78200
481.www.math.uni-augsburg.de78100
482.www.electronicafacil.net77500
483.www.wwf.org77200
484.www.luventicus.org77200
485.www.desy.de77100
486.www.cmap.polytechnique.fr76800
487.www.bosai.go.jp76800
488.www.whu.edu76700
489.www.zi.ku.dk76200
490.www.langenscheidt.de75900
491.www.ehess.fr75800
492.www.cfsan.fda.gov75600
493.www.wiwi.uni-augsburg.de75400
494.www.ul.com75300
495.www.riken.go.jp75300
496.www.tno.nl75300
497.similarminds.com74700
498.www-ai.cs.uni-dortmund.de74600
499.www.windows.ucar.edu74300
500.www.edscuola.it74100
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461. www.anl.gov

Rating: 83100 points*
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www.anl.gov

Argonne National Laboratory - Pioneering Science and Technology

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Study: Flamboyant male dancing attracts women best
By MARIA CHENG 2010-09-09T15:52:15ZLONDON (AP) -- John Travolta was onto something. Women are most attracted to male dancers who have big, flamboyant moves similar to the actor's trademark style, British scientists say in a new study....
hosted.ap.org
Personal Best: Just Me and My Pessimism in the ‘Race of Truth’
A time trial bike race illustrated the power of one mental strategy in racing and exemplified what motivates some people to stay with a sport.
feeds.nytimes.com
The mystery of mass: What makes one particle light and another heavy?
The author of Massive introduces a short film that summarises quantum mechanics and the quest for the Higgs bosonThe origin of mass is one of the most intriguing mysteries of nature. Some particles, such as the W boson (which carries the weak force) have so much mass they barely move, while others, like the photon, are entirely massless and zip around at the speed of light. What is it that makes one particle light and another heavy?The mass of fundamental particles those that carry forces and build nuclei and atoms is often explained by the way they move through an invisible "Higgs field" that is thought to pervade the vacuum of space. To some particles, such as the top quark, the Higgs field is like molasses: they get bogged down and become very heavy. To others, like the photon, the field is empty space: they fly through unimpeded and gain no weight at all. In this exclusive video, our kid Brian Cox explains how giant particle colliders like the Large Hadron Collider at Cern near Geneva, are closing in on the elusive Higgs particle. When and if they do, the puzzle of mass will be solved.Particle physicsCernPhysicsIan Sampleguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk
Beno樽t B Mandelbrot: the man who made geometry an art
The sphere of maths has borne few as provocative as the man whose 'fractals' demonstrated the universe's playful irregularityFew recent thinkers have woven such a beautiful braid of art and science as Beno樽t B Mandelbrot, who has died aged 85 in Cambridge, Massachusetts. (The B apparently doesn't stand for anything. He just felt like adding it.) Mandelbrot was a provocative mathematician, a subversive geometer. He left a beautiful legacy in visual art, for Mandelbrot was the man who named and explained fractals those complex, apparently chaotic yet geometrically ordered shapes that delight the eye and fascinate the mind. They are icons of modern understanding of the universe's complexity.The Mandelbrot set, one of the most famous fractal designs, is named after him. With its fizzing fringe of crystal-like microforms blossoming out of a conjunction of black circles, this fractal pattern looks crazy but is the outcome of geometrical calculations.Geometry, said Mandelbrot, is seen as "dry" because it can only explain regular shapes like the square, the cylinder and the cone. Such shapes have been analysed mathematically since the time of the ancient Greeks, which is why traditional geometry is known as Euclidean geometry. But in the 19th and 20th centuries, physicists and mathematicians started to think beyond Euclid and his regular universe. Mandelbrot was not the first, but with his startling fractals concept he created a visual manifesto for a non-Euclidean universe.Fractals and I'd be delighted if mathematicians can give a better explanation below are shapes that are irregular but repeat themselves at every scale: they contain themselves in themselves. Mandelbrot used the example of a cauliflower which, like a fern, is a fractal found in nature; if you look at the smallest sections of these vegetable forms, you see them mirroring the whole.Mandelbrot, who worked at IBM before becoming a professor at Yale, started thinking about irregular shapes by looking at maps of Great Britain. The squiggly shape of the UK mainland fascinated him and he wondered whether it was possible to make a mathematical model of its perimeter. Can you measure the British coastline? He discovered that you can at a distance, but that then the closer you look, the more you find. In a sense,
guardian.co.uk
Modest hopes for climate summit
"Keeping the show on the road" may be all governments can hope for at next week's UN climate talks, the UK admits.
bbc.co.uk