Science News
Tick tick boom, the Earth spits out a moon
New Scientist - 8 Jul 2013 19:00
Did a nuclear time bomb deep inside the young Earth tear the planet apart? The evidence could be staring down at us every night, says Stuart Clark (full text available to subscribers)
A Visualization Of What Went Wrong On Asiana Flight 214
Popular Science - 9 Jul 2013 01:45
In short: a steep approach, short of the runway. After the crash of Asiana Flight 214 over the weekend at San Francisco International Airport killed two and injured 168, the independent Aviation Safety Network culled fli...
How Accurate Is Hawk-Eye, Tennis's Ball-Caller?
Popular Science - 9 Jul 2013 00:00
Would you have wanted Wimbledon coverage to show "error bars" around its Hawk-Eye replays? How sharp are Hawk-Eyes really? I'm talking about commercial systems, such as Hawk-Eye and GoalControl, that use cameras to recor...
The TSA's 6 Best Instagrams Of Confiscated Weapons
Popular Science - 8 Jul 2013 22:45
The TSA is instagramming dangerous items confiscated in airports. Adorable!
When People Bring Weapons Into Airports, The TSA Is Ready With Instagram
Popular Science - 8 Jul 2013 22:45
Confiscations are better filtered in Valencia.
Lake Vostok may boast a thriving ecosystem
New Scientist - 8 Jul 2013 22:13
Buried beneath Antarctic ice for 15 million years, Lake Vostok may be home to diverse organisms - including animals, if new findings are to be believed
Big Pic: Life-Sized T. Rex Sculpture Stares Down The Eiffel Tower
Popular Science - 8 Jul 2013 21:45
Cue freaked-out tourists. The classic beauty of the Eiffel Tower and Seine River draw scores of tourists to Paris. But do you know what would really spruce the place up? A full-size, chrome Tyrannosaurus rex sculpture, p...
Why was Asiana jet flying so slowly before crash?
New Scientist - 8 Jul 2013 21:08
The Boeing jet that crashed at San Francisco airport did so due to low airspeed. Was lack of training or over-reliance on automation to blame?
Medical Tricorder Startup Scanadu Scout Raises Over $1.3M With Two Weeks Left
Singularity Hub - 8 Jul 2013 21:05
Over the years, it has become increasingly evident that Star Trek is a highly influential -- if not the most influential -- work in science fiction that has inspired generations of people to pursue science and technology...
WHO to decide whether MERS is global health emergency
New Scientist - 8 Jul 2013 20:56
A meeting on the threat from the MERS coronavirus has been called under a procedure used only once before - for the swine flu pandemic in 2009
A Dramatic Finish For Solar Impulse, The Solar-Powered Plane That Flew Across The U.S.
Popular Science - 8 Jul 2013 19:00
The craft touched down in New York over the weekend after zipping across the States, but not without some technical difficulties. Since May, the solar-powered plane Solar Impulse has been on a cross-country trip across t...
First baby born after full genetic screening of embryos
New Scientist - 8 Jul 2013 18:24
New IVF tool that screens entire genome of embryos could increase the number of successful pregnancies, but will it usher in an era of designer babies?
What do we fix first - environment or economy?
New Scientist - 8 Jul 2013 18:00
A slew of books, ebooks, pamphlets and journals are tackling the crucial relationship between environmental crisis and financial meltdown. By Fred Pearce
In this echo-free room you can hear your heartbeat
New Scientist - 8 Jul 2013 17:41
Resembling a surreal futuristic city, this anechoic chamber plays a vital role in making sure that satellites deliver accurate environmental data
Ethnic background influences immune response to TB
New Scientist - 8 Jul 2013 14:19
A clear contrast in immune response to TB between groups of African and Eurasian descent indicates that drug trials should take ethnicity into account
Martyr myth: Inside the minds of suicide bombers
New Scientist - 8 Jul 2013 12:00
Portraying suicide bombers as psychologically normal is wrong and plays into the hands of their leaders, says criminal-justice researcher Adam Lankford
Does banning prostitution make women safer?
New Scientist - 8 Jul 2013 11:00
Most of what we think we know about sex trafficking is wrong, says Laura AgustÃn, who has spent 20 years investigating the sex industry