Science News
Comment isn't free: the downside of Web 2.0
New Scientist - 15 Oct 2013 11:33
Popular Science magazine's decision to kill online commenting should be the start of a wider discussion, says Dietram A. Scheufele
Climate Change Will Not Spare an Inch of Global Ocean, Study Finds
Live Science - 15 Oct 2013 23:51
Researchers have estimated that the effects of climate change will touch every inch in the world's oceans, and will influence the lives of between 1.4 billion and 2 billion people who live and rely on coastal ecosystems.
Ghost elephants win Wildlife Photographer of the Year prize
New Scientist - 15 Oct 2013 23:30
A trotting baby elephant gave Greg du Toit the shot that has bagged him pride of place in London's Natural History Museum
The Ultimate Iron Chef - When 3D Printers Invade the Kitchen (Op-Ed)
Live Science - 15 Oct 2013 23:15
Recent advances in 3D printing are driving the concept closer to reality.
Light can break Newton's third law - by cheating
New Scientist - 15 Oct 2013 23:11
Laser pulses in optical fibres have been made to accelerate themselves, possibly opening a door to faster electronics and more reliable communication
Nobel winner Higgs plans to retire next year
Phys.org - 15 Oct 2013 23:04
Nobel Prize-winning scientist Peter Higgs says he is hoping to fully retire next year at the age of 85--and that he once turned down a knighthood.
Zoomable holograms pave the way for versatile, portable projectors
Phys.org - 15 Oct 2013 22:55
Imagine giving a presentation to a roomful of important customers when suddenly the projector fails. You whip out your smartphone, beam your PowerPoint presentation onto the conference room screen, and are back in busine...
Nobel-Winning Physicist Peter Higgs to Retire Next Year
Live Science - 15 Oct 2013 22:31
British physicist Peter Higgs, co-winner of the recently announced 2013 Nobel Prize in physics, plans to retire next year, after he turns 85, according to news reports.
18-Foot-Long Deep-Sea Creature Found off California
Live Science - 15 Oct 2013 22:12
The staff at a Southern California educational facility stumbled onto a surprise when an 18-foot-long (5.5 meters) sea creature washed near the shore.
Your Liver May Be 'Eating' Your Brain
Live Science - 15 Oct 2013 21:11
The liver and brain both need a compound called PPARalpha, a new study finds. If the liver uses too much PPARalpha in order to breakdown belly fat, there may not be enough left for the brain's hippocampus region to funct...
Giving Birth to New Insights into Brain Development and Disease (Op-Ed)
Live Science - 15 Oct 2013 20:56
A new study by Tomohisa Toda and colleagues, published today in Developmental Cell, has contributed novel insights into how the process of birth can regulate specific aspects of brain development.
Golden wrapper to protect Milky Way mapper
New Scientist - 15 Oct 2013 20:53
Due to launch in about a month, the Gaia probe will unfold a huge sunshield so its ultra-sensitive camera can chart a billion stars in our galaxy
How Earth's rotation affects vortices in nature
Phys.org - 15 Oct 2013 20:51
What do smoke rings, tornadoes and the Great Red Spot of Jupiter have in common? They are all examples of vortices, regions within a fluid (liquid, gas or plasma) where the flow spins around an imaginary straight or curv...
An optical switch based on a single nano-diamond
Phys.org - 15 Oct 2013 20:46
A recent study led by researchers of the ICFO (Institute of Photonic Sciences) demonstrates that a single nano-diamond can be operated as an ultrafast single-emitter optical switch operating at room temperature. The scie...
Size matters in the giant magnetoresistance effect in semiconductors
Phys.org - 15 Oct 2013 20:44
In a paper appearing in Nature's Scientific Reports, Dr. Ramesh Mani, professor of physics and astronomy at Georgia State University, reports that a giant magnetoresistance effect depends on the physical size of the devi...
Watch specialised number neurons in action
New Scientist - 15 Oct 2013 20:30
Brain cells that burst into life when people talk about numbers or numerical concepts are revealed in a real-world study that eavesdrops on the brain
Human 'Mad Cow Disease': 1 in 2,000 Brits Carry Abnormal Protein
Live Science - 15 Oct 2013 20:20
One in 2,000 people in the United Kingdom carry a variant of a protein linked with Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, the human form of mad cow disease, a new study finds. Although the disease itself is rare, infection could be ...
Typhoon Wipha Battering Tokyo, Eastern Japan
Live Science - 15 Oct 2013 20:10
Millions of people in Japan are bracing for the approach of Typhoon Wipha and the expected destructive winds and life-threatening flooding.
Ketamine-like drug lifts depression without the trip
New Scientist - 15 Oct 2013 20:03
The first randomised placebo-controlled trial of a ketamine-like drug finds it may work in treating depression, without ketamine's tough side effects
Astronauts See Strange Cloud in Space from Missile Launch (Photos)
Live Science - 15 Oct 2013 19:52
The astronauts caught sight of an eerie view outside of the International Space Station last week.
Resistant cancers may hijack fetus's detox switch
New Scientist - 15 Oct 2013 19:49
A genetic switch that may help embryos remove toxins from their cells is reactivated in some cancers, where it helps the cells flush out anti-cancer drugs
ITER Fusion Reactor to Postpone Basic Physics Research
Live Science - 15 Oct 2013 19:35
A panel has discussed plans to keep the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor on track to generate 500 MW of power from an input of 50 MW by 2028.