Science News
How Having Three Parents Leads To Disease-Free Kids
Popular Science - 30 Sep 2013 22:52
Jumping Rope Ryan Snook This summer, government health officials in the United Kingdom made headlines by announcing that they will let scientists create babies with DNA from three different people. The procedure is a typ...
How Human Do We Want Our Robots To Look?
Popular Science - 30 Sep 2013 22:15
Robot Faces Georgia Tech Let's say you're getting a robot butler. (Congratulations on your purchase, future-dweller!) You can choose between three models for your new Jetsons-style Rosie robot: a clearly robotic machine,...
Infertile woman gives birth after boost to ovaries
New Scientist - 30 Sep 2013 21:00
A new fertility treatment awakens dormant follicles in women who have stopped menstruating, with the first test resulting in the birth of a baby boy
Government Shutdown, Science Suspended
Physics Buzz - 30 Sep 2013 20:32
As the clock winds down toward a potential shutdown of the U.S. federal government, many observers doubt a deal will be struck in time. A shutdown would send at least 800,000 federal workers home temporarily until Congr...
Interactions.org Newsdigest 30 Sep 2013
Interactions - 30 Sep 2013 20:30
-- Invigorated and unified, US particle-physics community considers future directions -- Particle 'Accelerator on a Chip' Uses Lasers Instead of Microwaves; Could Advance Science and Medicine -- Ukraine to become associa...
SpaceX gets a rival - and tests novel reusable rocket
New Scientist - 30 Sep 2013 20:24
Orbital Sciences has docked a craft with the space station. Meanwhile a SpaceX rocket failed a reusability test – but could still help end an era of wasteful space flight
IPCC digested: Just leave the fossil fuels underground
New Scientist - 30 Sep 2013 19:30
Amid all the discussion of the details of the latest IPCC report, we must not forget the bottom line
Jacques Cousteau's Grandson Plans To Live Underwater For A Month
Popular Science - 30 Sep 2013 19:16
Astronauts Outside Aquarius Reef Base Mission 31 will use this reef base. NASA/Mark Widick, via Wikimedia Commons Fabien Cousteau, the grandson of legendary underwater explorer Jacques Cousteau, is planning an undersea e...
Today on New Scientist
New Scientist - 30 Sep 2013 18:45
All the latest on newscientist.com: a new way to land on Mars, how we outgrow our gods, new science in IPCC report, cybercrime's professional elite and more
Trippy Video: A Train Ride Recorded With A Handheld 3-D Scanner
Popular Science - 30 Sep 2013 18:25
Artist Chris Coleman rides the Denver Light Rail, and one day, started to record the train and its stations with a handheld 3-D scanner and laptop. (Sure. Why not. Probably a long ride.) He then digitally manipulated the...
A Long-Lived Rodent Offers Hints to the Causes of Aging
Singularity Hub - 30 Sep 2013 18:00
The secret to a long life could lie with the naked mole-rat. This admittedly unsightly rodent is about the size of a mouse but lives about 10 times as long. Vera Gorbunova, a biologist at the University of Rochester, wan...
Researchers demonstrate 'accelerator on a chip'
Symmetry Magazine - 30 Sep 2013 17:18
The technology used to create a new mini-accelerator could spawn new generations of smaller, less expensive devices for science and medicine. In an advance that could dramatically shrink particle accelerators for science...
Peachy Printer Kickstarter Promises $100 3D Printer and Scanner - Can They Do It?
Singularity Hub - 30 Sep 2013 17:17
3D printers tend to blow up on Kickstarter. And one of the latest, the Peachy Printer, is no exception. The project's raised almost C$500,000, about ten times its original goal. Peachy is an innovative approach to 3D pri...
Brake away: Rethinking how we land on Mars
New Scientist - 30 Sep 2013 17:00
NASA is rebooting its Mars landings, thanks to a smart idea from the cold war era, and high-stakes rocket tests in the desert. Sally Adee looks on (full text available to subscribers)
What Happens If An Astronaut Floats Off In Space?
Popular Science - 30 Sep 2013 16:00
Space Scare Despite the risks, no mission has ever lost a space-walking astronaut. Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures In the film Gravity, which opens this month, two astronauts are on a spacewalk when an accident hurtles th...
No need for gods any more
New Scientist - 30 Sep 2013 16:00
As societies mature, many outgrow the need for a spiritual superbeing, argues Big Gods: How religion transformed cooperation and conflict
Physics computing innovation benefits multitude
Symmetry Magazine - 30 Sep 2013 15:00
Millions around the world, both scientists and non-scientists, use Scientific Linux, an operating system developed for particle physics. When a handful of developers at Fermilab modified a computer operating system for u...
Climate report: How the science has moved on
New Scientist - 30 Sep 2013 14:37
The science of climate change has moved on a great deal in the six years since the last IPCC report. We break down the most important new findings
Will push for global digital privacy treaty succeed?
New Scientist - 30 Sep 2013 14:03
Edward Snowden's leaks over mass digital spying are proving a rallying point for nations seeking to curb electronic surveillance of their citizens
Rockstar planet hunter: Genius award will free my brain
New Scientist - 30 Sep 2013 13:58
Astrophysicist and newly named MacArthur genius Sara Seager talks about her hunt for exotic new worlds, and draws links between parenting and science
First physical evidence of why you're an owl or a lark
New Scientist - 30 Sep 2013 12:26
Brain differences distinguish night owls from morning larks, and could explain why those of us who prefer a late start are at greater risk of depression
Black-hole eruption nearby is a warning for us all
New Scientist - 30 Sep 2013 11:39
Cosmic threats, like the flare-up 2 million years ago of the Milky Way's black hole, are a reminder that humanity's survival is up to us