Science News
Making "The Chart of Electromagnetic Radiations"
Physics Buzz - 26 Sep 2013 19:18
Even a small portion of the comprehensive Chart of Electromagnetic Radiations is crammed full of science. About a month ago, the Lawrence Livermore lab posted this gorgeous old poster of the electromagnetic spectrum onto...
Could Ants Teach the Biofuel Industry a Thing or Two?
KQED Quest - 26 Sep 2013 16:00
How leaf-cutter ants and fungus gardens could provide the model for sustainably producing biofuels.
Activist Drone Catches Pigeon Shooters
Popular Science - 26 Sep 2013 23:30
Pigeon House Tuur Van Balen Shooting clay pigeons is a popular U.S. sport, appealing to everyone from President Obama on down. In Pennsylvania, the thrill of shooting flying clay out of the air isn't enough for everyone....
Google Has Unveiled A New Search Algorithm
Popular Science - 26 Sep 2013 21:14
Google Search Screenshot Google announced today that about a month ago, the company issued a major update to their main search algorithm. It's called Hummingbird, and it reportedly affects 90 percent of searches worldwid...
This Magic Projection Box Will Melt Your Brain
Popular Science - 26 Sep 2013 21:00
San Francisco design studio Bot & Dolly created this demonstration of what is almost certainly sorcery a projection mapping system. The project's simply called "Box," and without ruining too much, the studio projects ima...
Trained Police Rats Sniff Out Crime In The Netherlands
Popular Science - 26 Sep 2013 20:30
Smell A Rat? Oskila via Wikimedia Commons In Rotterdam, the second-largest city in the Netherlands, rats are more than just scurrying subway pests. They're trained crime fighters. The Dutch police have begun training rat...
Mammals in fragmented forests die out within 25 years
New Scientist - 26 Sep 2013 20:00
Human activity is slicing up forests worldwide, and it seems the resulting "islands" of vegetation can go into ecological meltdown much faster than thought
Pop-up island emerges from the sea after earthquake
New Scientist - 26 Sep 2013 18:52
The major earthquake that struck Pakistan on Tuesday appears to have spawned a muddy mound off the coast
Today on New Scientist
New Scientist - 26 Sep 2013 18:45
All the latest on newscientist.com: why space has exactly three dimensions, first carbon nanotube computer, fish oils and brainpower, and more
A Crazy Size Comparison Of Sci-Fi's Greatest Ships [Infographic]
Popular Science - 26 Sep 2013 18:00
Being a small child, I often think to myself: What if the Star Wars spaceships got into a fight with the ships from Star Troopers? Thanks to this infographic from DeviantART user Dirk Loechel, I finally have an inkling o...
How the prisoner's dilemma changes diners' etiquette
New Scientist - 26 Sep 2013 18:00
Artichoke and parmesan salad or chicken's foot soup? Jacob Aron attends a bizarre banquet to find out what happens when betrayal and trust set the menu
Matchstick-sized sensor can record your private chats
New Scientist - 26 Sep 2013 18:00
A sensor previously used for military operations can now be tuned to secretly locate and record any single conversation on a busy street
3D-printed objects outgrow their printers
New Scientist - 26 Sep 2013 17:34
Using fractal-based algorithms that break an object down into a long, foldable chain, we can now 3D print and assemble items larger than the printer itself
'Black holes' of the ocean could curb climate change
New Scientist - 26 Sep 2013 17:28
Swirling ocean currents are mathematically like black holes – and could slow polar thawing by carrying warm water away
A carbonic computer: Cylinder head
The Economist - 26 Sep 2013 17:05
NANOTUBES--tiny, hollow cylinders of carbon--have long been a product seeking an application. They are harder than diamond and dozens of times stronger than steel. Make them one way and they will conduct electricity like...
Marine ecology: Sea wolves
The Economist - 26 Sep 2013 17:05
The ranger's here FOR decades, rangers in Yellowstone National Park, in the American West, had to cull the area's red deer (known locally as elk, though they bear no resemblance to European elk, known locally as moose) b...
China in space: How long a reach?
The Economist - 26 Sep 2013 17:05
THE Soviet Union in 1961. The United States in 1962. China in 2003. It took a long time for a taikonaut to join the list of cosmonauts and astronauts who have gone into orbit around Earth and (in a few cases) ventured be...
Genetic oncology: Cancer cartography
The Economist - 26 Sep 2013 17:05
A CANCER, put simply, is a gang of rogue cells multiplying out of control. But each gang is different, so "cancer" is actually a term that embraces hundreds of specific ailments propelled by an even larger number of gene...
A dispatch from the front
The Economist - 26 Sep 2013 17:05
No news is often good news. AIDS has dropped out of the headlines in recent years, and that is because, in the battle between virus and people, people are winning.This year's report by UNAIDS, the United Nations agency c...
Why space has exactly three dimensions
New Scientist - 26 Sep 2013 17:00
The explanation of one of reality's greatest mysteries could lie in physics we already know (full text available to subscribers)
Swiveling Science: Conserving Momentum in a Spinning Chair
Scientific American - 26 Sep 2013 17:00
Key concepts [More] --
Gun control: We need a new conversation
New Scientist - 26 Sep 2013 16:00
The lack of evidence on firearms violence can, ironically, be turned to the advantage of gun control advocates if they get their story straight