Science News
Did US spy satellites track Malaysia Flight MH370?
New Scientist - 13 Mar 2014 20:46
In a world of satellite tracking and GPS, how do you lose a plane - and could spy satellites have seen what others didn't?
Diagnosing dementia: This is not spinal tap
The Economist - 13 Mar 2014 18:00
AS JOHN IOANNIDIS prepares to launch an institute intended, among other things, to combat small, statistically underpowered scientific studies (see article), just such a study has hit the headlines. The media reaction to...
The therapy pill: Forget your phobia in fast forward
New Scientist - 13 Mar 2014 18:00
Talking cures for phobias or addictions take ages to detrain your brain. What if a memory-boosting drug let you do it in a day? Jessica Hamzelou pops the pill
Quantum physics secures new cryptography scheme
e! Science News - 13 Mar 2014 11:49
The way we secure digital transactions could soon change. An international team has demonstrated a form of quantum cryptography that can protect people doing business with others they may not know or trust -- a situation...
Air Crash Investigation: How the Search for Flight MH370 is Run
Live Science - 13 Mar 2014 06:07
The longer it takes, the harder it gets to find the lost Malaysia Airlines flight MH370.
Virtual lab for nuclear waste repository research
EurekAlert! - 13 Mar 2014 06:00
(Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft) A nuclear waste repository must seal in radioactive waste safely for one million years. Researchers currently have to study them and their processes in real underground laboratories but a virtua...
What Is Creatine?
Live Science - 13 Mar 2014 23:08
Creatine is a performance-enhancing supplement used by athletes and other people, often in the hope of building muscle. But does creatine work? And is it safe to take? Here's a look at what science has to say about takin...
Where's the Best Place to Feel an Earthquake?
Live Science - 13 Mar 2014 22:44
The best place to feel an earthquake is in bed, according to a study of Italy's crowdsourced earthquake reports.
Medieval multiverse heralded modern cosmic conundrums
New Scientist - 13 Mar 2014 22:16
A 13th-century Latin text has yielded a mathematical model of the universe that anticipates problems with our best understanding of the big bang
Watch as the world's first 3D-printed house goes up
New Scientist - 13 Mar 2014 21:00
Architects are attempting to 3D-print an entire house in Amsterdam. Now you can buy a ticket to watch the construction and help fund the project
Measuring speed in flying inkjet drops
Phys.org - 13 Mar 2014 20:30
Physicists from the FOM workgroup Physics of Fluids (MESA+) at the University of Twente and from Océ-Technologies have developed a method to measure detailed speed data in flying inkjet drops. Their research was recentl...
Children to Order: The Ethics of 'Designer Babies'
Live Science - 13 Mar 2014 20:09
As technologies such as mitochondrial transfer and fetal genetic testing become reality, society needs to come up with an ethical framework for evaluating them, one researcher argues.
Mini Arctic T. Rex Relative Discovered
Live Science - 13 Mar 2014 20:09
A pygmy cousin of T. rex has been found on the North Slope of Alaska, where it once lived within the Arctic circle. The dinosaur's small body size may have been an adaption to its seasonal environment.
Data Fail! How Google Flu Trends Fell Way Short
Live Science - 13 Mar 2014 20:02
Big Data has amazing potential for public health and social sciences, but Google's attempts to track the flu via online search terms have met with some challenges. These problems highlight the pitfalls of Big Data for so...
Surfactant Science: Make a Milk Rainbow
Scientific American - 13 Mar 2014 20:00
A Colorful Saint Patrick's Day project from Science Buddies --
Google Flu Trends gets it wrong three years running
New Scientist - 13 Mar 2014 20:00
The search giant's much-hyped flu tracker has been way out on its predictions for years – raising concerns over our reliance on big data
A Punishing Winter in the North Atlantic Too
Live Science - 13 Mar 2014 19:53
The winter storms that lashed England with record floods in February were among an unusually high number of hurricane-force storms in the North Atlantic this winter, according to NOAA's Ocean Prediction Center.
450-Million-Year-Old Marine Creatures 'Babysat' Their Young
Live Science - 13 Mar 2014 19:51NSF Confirms First Astrophysicist, Second Woman As Director
Live Science - 13 Mar 2014 19:49
The new director of the National Science Foundation, France Cordova, is the first astrophysicist and second woman to be confirmed as head of the federal agency.
Today on New Scientist
New Scientist - 13 Mar 2014 19:45
All the latest on newscientist.com: therapy pill to detrain your brain, Colorado river to return from the dead, Formula 1 goes green, OCD and more
Withering monsoon may have doomed past Asian society
New Scientist - 13 Mar 2014 19:39
The Indian summer monsoon abruptly weakened 4200 years ago, and this may have led to the collapse of the elaborate Indus Valley Civilization
Podcast: Phase Transition and Bull Sperm
Physics Buzz - 13 Mar 2014 19:35
Greetings, podcast listeners! This week's Physics Central Podcast is a short story I heard about at the APS March Meeting that just wrapped up in Denver, Colorado. A physicist at Cornell University is studying bull sperm...