Science News
A new way to make sheets of graphene
e! Science News - 26 May 2014 02:32
Graphene's promise as a material for new kinds of electronic devices, among other uses, has led researchers around the world to study the material in search of new applications. But one of the biggest limitations to wide...
Dredge-and-dump will damage the Great Barrier Reef
New Scientist - 26 May 2014 02:00
Dumping spoil from Australian port expansion projects into the Coral Sea will do serious damage to the Great Barrier Reef, says ecologist Jon Brodie
Relaxation helps pack DNA into a virus
Phys.org - 26 May 2014 21:00
Researchers at the University of California, San Diego have found that DNA packs more easily into the tight confines of a virus when given a chance to relax, they report in a pair of papers to be published in in the earl...
How moral fundamentalism becomes a scientific sin
New Scientist - 26 May 2014 20:00
We are moral because we need to be, argues Mark Johnson in Morality for Humans - and our moral compass rests on our knack for imagining future scenarios
Heads or tails: Experimental quantum coin flipping cryptography performs better than classical protocols
Phys.org - 26 May 2014 17:40
(Phys.org) --Cryptography - the practice and study of techniques for secure communication in the presence of third parties, referred to as adversaries - has a long and varied history. In ancient Greece, for example, the ...
Donating to UNICEF Innovation Labs Could Land You in the Next Star Wars Movie
Singularity Hub - 26 May 2014 17:20
What are the grand challenges? Depends on the galaxy. In unspecified galaxies far, far away and long ago, energy and cheap space travel were no issue. Evil Sith lords suffering from acute megalomania, on the other hand, ...
Supercritical fluids explained
Phys.org - 26 May 2014 15:50
When we boil a kettle, we observe what scientists call a phase transition: the water changes from being a liquid to a gas as water becomes less dense. One litre of water boils to give about 1,000 litres of steam at atmos...
The Reality Of 'Silicon Valley'
Popular Science - 26 May 2014 15:00
Mike Judge Michael Caulfield/Getty Images When Mike Judge, creator of Office Space and Beavis and Butt-head, set out to write his HBO comedy series, Silicon Valley, about Bay Area coders, he wanted to conceive a simple, ...
A New "Theory of Everything": Reality Emerges from Cosmic Copyright Law
Scientific American - 26 May 2014 14:00
“Constructor theory” unites in one framework how information is processed in the classical and quantum realms --
Friendship: Do animals have friends, too?
New Scientist - 26 May 2014 13:00
Whether you're a human or a horse, it takes a lot of brainpower to support a complex social group - and that puts a limit on how many friends we can have (full text available to subscribers)
Hate Your Desk Job? You've Got Good Reason
Live Science - 26 May 2014 12:32
Not getting outside much, gaining too much weight and having to be in front of a computer hour upon hour are some of the pitfalls of having a desk job.
A novel disease-preventing antioxidant pathway
EurekAlert! - 26 May 2014 06:00
(Duke-NUS Graduate Medical School Singapore ) A team in Singapore has recently showed that uric acid is a major intracellular antioxidant, possibly even more important than the antioxidants we try to eat. They also disco...
Immunologists discover immune system precursor cells that fight infection
EurekAlert! - 26 May 2014 06:00
(Johannes Gutenberg Universitaet Mainz) The innate immune system recognizes infectious agents such as viruses and bacteria. A group of lymphocytes known as 'innate lymphoid cells' or ILCs plays a central role in the defe...
New perspectives to the design of molecular cages
EurekAlert! - 26 May 2014 06:00
(Academy of Finland) Researchers from the University of Jyväskylä report a new method of building molecular cages.
Molecules do the triple twist
EurekAlert! - 26 May 2014 06:00
(Academy of Finland) An international research team led by Academy Professor Kari Rissanen of the University of Jyväskylä (Finland) and Professor Rainer Herges of the University of Kiel (Germany) has managed to make a ...
Refugees forced to return to Syria for cancer treatment
New Scientist - 26 May 2014 01:01
Among the other hardships refugees face, host countries are now struggling to meet the cost of their cancer care, leaving them to choose between illness or debt