Sign In
to Vote &
Create Storyboards.
 

Science News

Location American Science News for 6 June 2013
Exercise confers huge health benefits, so why does it often feel like such a chore? Evolutionary biologist Daniel Lieberman explains the paradox (full text available to subscribers)
Read More
2
0
The 220-story, 2,750-foot, 90-day Sky City construction project is a go. We've been following Chinese construction firm Broad Sustainable Building's ambitious plan to build the world's tallest skyscraper for a while now,...
Read More
1
0

Interactions.org Newsdigest 6 June 2013

Interactions - 7 Jun 2013 01:00
-- Nobel contender sees multiple cosmic mysteries -- New Telescope Strategy Could Resolve Dark-Matter Mystery, Scientists Say -- Do dark-matter discs envelop galaxies? -- CERN Council Updates European Strategy for Partic...
Read More
0
0

Why Government Phone Spying Is Really About Big Data

Popular Science - 6 Jun 2013 23:30
Why Government Phone Spying Is Really About Big Data Verizon has given the U.S. National Security Agency information on all its telephone calls for months. But it's not the calls' content the government is looking at--it's their context. For the past three months, Verizon ...
Read More
0
0
What's in the Cube? Mystery Revealed, Prize Awarded to Young Man From Scotland Bryan Henderson hails from Edinburgh Scotland. He's 18 years old and recently became a god. Henderson won the collaborative, cube-destroying game Curiosity--What's Inside the Cube, and he's reportedly still a bit baffled...
Read More
0
0

Elderly suns rip their closest planets to shreds

New Scientist - 6 Jun 2013 22:55
A survey of planet-hosting stars offers some of the first real-world evidence that ageing suns shred inner planets, offering a clue to Earth's eventual fate
Read More
0
0
Watch the wiggling tail of sun-grazing comet Lovejoy give unprecedented insight into the solar magnetic field
Read More
0
0

Dust devils around stars may help planets grow

New Scientist - 6 Jun 2013 22:00
A vortex seen in a disc around a young star may solve the mystery of how planets grow from grains of dust without first spiralling in to destruction
Read More
0
0
Laser Time Cloak Hides The Fact That An Event Ever Happened This is the first almost-practical application of temporal cloaking ... but it might work too well. Electrical engineers at Purdue University have found a way to make your data disappear completely--into holes in time. T...
Read More
0
0

Today on New Scientist

New Scientist - 6 Jun 2013 21:00
All the latest on newscientist.com: why humans hate exercise, ancient Egyptian failure to flee floods, carbon emissions make Earth greener, and more
Read More
0
0
A project at MIT lets you get to a web page by tracing the pattern of the code with your smartphone
Read More
0
0
Penny-Sized Vacuum System Could Help Detect Chemical Weapons From DARPA, some very tiny suction. Five years ago, DARPA challenged researchers to create a vacuum system smaller than a cubic centimeter and powered by just a quarter-Watt of energy. This week, DARPA announced the prog...
Read More
0
0

Zoologger: The lyrebird that's a song-and-dance man

New Scientist - 6 Jun 2013 20:13
Male superb lyrebirds are famous for their vocal mimicry, but they also match their songs to carefully chosen dance steps
Read More
0
0

America's Road To Energy Independence, Part 2

Popular Science - 6 Jun 2013 19:15
A four-part series on the clean technologies that will set us free brightcove.createExperiences(); Our series follows Editor-in-Chief Jacob Ward on a trip across the country and around the world to see firsthand the idea...
Read More
0
0
CrowdOptic To Put Augmented Reality Art Gallery in Toronto Cityscape In two weeks, tens of thousands of people will fill the streets of Toronto for the seventh annual Luminato Festival to see beautiful works of art, hear great music, and enjoy the sights of a world-class city. What they d...
Read More
0
0

Recycling a House

KQED Quest - 6 Jun 2013 19:00
Recycling a House Construction companies in the Rustbelt tackle the problem of old, abandoned houses with a new vision for recycling; board by board and brick by brick.
Read More
0
0

Google Maps change to suit what you like best

New Scientist - 6 Jun 2013 18:32
Google will soon use social media to tailor the map it shows you. A useful addition in many respects, but will it risk narrowing your view of the world?
Read More
0
0
Wave your hand to change the music. The music in the other room. Imagine the Kinect. Now imagine you can use gestures like you'd use with the Kinect to control anything--appliances, lights, gadgets, whatever. Now imagine...
Read More
0
0

Hungry algae may explain how plants became green

New Scientist - 6 Jun 2013 11:30
Over a billion years ago, the ancestors of plants ate bacteria and gained a crucial new ability. A tiny alga with a mouth could show how they did it
Read More
0
0

"Breathprint" Identification

Physics Central - 6 Jun 2013 11:03
Scientists can now identify people by their breath -- just like a fingerprint
Read More
0
0

{TITLE}

{PUBLISHER} - {PUBLISHED_DATE}
{TITLE} {CONTENT}
Read More
{VIEWS}
0


Storyboard
Print
{VIEWS}
0
0




Share this Article

Location



Create Storyboard