Science News
Dread the Gym? Exercise with Friends Puts People in a Better Mood
Live Science - 6 Nov 2013 16:30
If exercise isn't your idea of fun, maybe you should invite some friends: A new study suggests people enjoy physical activity more when they're with others.
Cruisin' | Space Wallpaper
Live Science - 6 Nov 2013 15:25
The sun-approaching Comet ISON floats against a seemingly infinite backdrop of numerous galaxies and a handful of foreground stars in this amazing space wallpaper taken in April 2013 by NASA's Hubble Space Telescope.
Winners named in 2013 AAAS Kavli Science Journalism Awards competition
EurekAlert! - 6 Nov 2013 07:00
(American Association for the Advancement of Science) Stories about efforts to prevent the Asian carp from invading the Great Lakes, about evolutionary stress on endangered pupfish in the Mojave Desert, and about the use...
Monkey controls two virtual arms with thoughts alone
New Scientist - 6 Nov 2013 21:00
For the first time, electrodes placed in the brain have allowed monkeys to control two virtual arms simultaneously using just the power of thought
CSI Chelyabinsk: 10 insights from Russia's meteorite
New Scientist - 6 Nov 2013 20:32
The Russian meteorite was the largest to hit Earth in a century. From sunburns to exotic chemistry, it sparked a flurry of forensic research
Answers to big questions could lie in small particles
Symmetry Magazine - 6 Nov 2013 16:00
Scientists planning the next decade in US particle physics consider what we can learn from fundamental particles called neutrinos. We live in a galaxy permeated with tiny particles called neutrinos. Trillions of them str...
Holograms set for greatness
Phys.org - 6 Nov 2013 14:50
A new technique that combines optical plates to manipulate laser light improves the quality of holograms.
Going hypersonic: spyplane could jump to Mach 6
New Scientist - 6 Nov 2013 14:16
Aircraft could fly at six times the speed of sound, now that engineers claim to have solved a problem that prevented aircraft flying faster than Mach 3
3-dimensional carbon goes metallic
EurekAlert! - 6 Nov 2013 07:00
(Virginia Commonwealth University) A theoretical, three-dimensional form of carbon that is metallic under ambient temperature and pressure has been discovered by an international research team.
Yasser Arafat's Death Linked to Radioactive Polonium
Live Science - 6 Nov 2013 23:26
Since Yasser Arafat died of uncertain causes in 2004, rumors have swirled that the Palestinian leader may have been assassinated. Investigators determined that Arafat's personal effects and his body contained extraordina...
Monkey Avatar: Primates Move Virtual Arms with Their Mind | Video
Live Science - 6 Nov 2013 23:15
Virtual monkey avatar shown from a 3rd person perspective as the movements of the two arms are decoded in real-time from the brain of a rhesus monkey. The monkey sees the arms and 3D objects from a 1st person perspective...
Worried About Dementia? Learn a Second Language
Live Science - 6 Nov 2013 23:13
Bilingualism can strengthen the brain, a new study shows. People who spoke two languages developed dementia about 5 years later, on average, than people who spoke only one language.
Learn another language to delay three dementias
New Scientist - 6 Nov 2013 23:00
Speaking more than one language seems to delay Alzheimer's, vascular and frontotemporal dementia for up to five years - and it may never be too late to start
Monkey Avatars: Primates Move Virtual Arms with Their Mind
Live Science - 6 Nov 2013 22:50Podcast: Rescue Radar from Dolphin Clicks
Physics Buzz - 6 Nov 2013 22:12
When physicist Tim Leighton saw documentary footage of dolphins using bubble nets to catch their prey, he knew something was fishy. How were the dolphins differentiating the bubbles and the fish? Even the most sophistoca...
Infant Eye-Tracking May Hold Clues to Autism
Live Science - 6 Nov 2013 22:08
How long infants spend looking at other people's eyes may be an earlier marker of autism, a new study suggests.
Lawrence Livermore researchers unveil carbon nanotube jungles to better detect molecules
e! Science News - 6 Nov 2013 22:07
Researchers from Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) and the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) in Zurich have developed a new method of using nanotubes to detect molecules at extremely low concentrati...
Spider Traps Prey Using Amazing Ladder Webs
Live Science - 6 Nov 2013 22:02
Scientists discovered an "odd-clawed" spider that traps its prey using a fascinating ladder-shaped web.
A shot in the dark: Detector on the hunt for dark matter
Phys.org - 6 Nov 2013 22:00
Leslie Rosenberg and his colleagues are about to go hunting. Their quarry: A theorized-but-never-seen elementary particle called an axion.
100 Years After Death, Evolution's Other Discoverer Gains Recognition
Live Science - 6 Nov 2013 21:39
Long overshadowed by his friend Charles Darwin, Alfred Russel Wallace is finally gaining recognition as the other discoverer of evolution 100 years after his death.
Robot Cashier Learns to Safely Handle Knives
Live Science - 6 Nov 2013 21:20
A group of researchers at Cornell University teaching a robot how to properly and safely handle a variety of objects, from sharp knives to egg cartons, based on human feedback in a grocery-store scenario.
New Explosions Spotted at Snowy Russian Volcano
Live Science - 6 Nov 2013 21:17
A remote Russian volcano may be readying for a new eruption. On Nov. 5, a satellite spotted ash above Kamchatka's Zhupanovksy volcano, which recently woke from a decades-long slumber.