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Today on New Scientist: 9 November 2009
18:00 09 November 2009
Today's stories on newscientist.com, at a glance, including: the quest to explore the solar system's oceans, a plan to drill into a monster urban volcano, and where you can listen to an Arabesque for flatworms
Head-mounted microscope sees brain beneath the skull
14:45 09 November 2009 | 17 comments
A microscope fitted to rats' heads watched the animals' brains in action as they roved freely
Breath of fresh air transforms stem cells
14:32 09 November 2009 | 4 comments
Specialised lung tissue has been created by exposing stem cells to the open air
Spy-in-the-cab could improve teenage driving
FEATURE: 12:00 08 November 2009 | 32 comments
Novice drivers are responsible for a disproportionate number of accidents – now an in-car warning system has cut incidents of reckless driving by half
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Murderer with 'aggression genes' gets sentence cut
"Isn't there a thing called 'equality before the law'? Judgment should be according to what he did, not what he may have a higher probability to do." bartleby
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Why it's good to log out
How to harness malingering electrons, a quantum bifurcating footpath, and the importance of seeking medical attention if you snuff it
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Pluto: I'm a planet, damn it!
10:00 10 November 2009
Pluto finally speaks out on the planet controversy
The murk and the magic
21:18 09 November 2009 - updated 22:07 09 November 2009
A bold new play shows a darker side of Isaac Newton, who spent much of his time navigating the muddled mazes of theology











