Science News
Mysterious Earthen 'Mima' Mounds Created by Plants, Not Animals
Live Science - 23 Jun 2014 15:19
The large mima mounds in Washington are most often thought to be the work of pocket gophers, but these animals may, in fact, be innocent. Now scientists have a new explanation for the mysterious vegetation-topped mounds.
Researchers explain emergence of bacterial vortex
Phys.org - 23 Jun 2014 21:00
When a bunch of B. subtilis bacteria are confined within a droplet of water, a very strange thing happens. The chaotic motion of all those individual swimmers spontaneously organizes into a swirling vortex, with bacteria...
Ebola Virus: Why Isn't There a Cure?
Live Science - 23 Jun 2014 23:49
Ebola first appeared more than three decades ago, but there is still no cure or specific treatment for the disease, in part because the dangerous nature of the virus makes it difficult to study, experts say.
Higgs boson shows scientists new tricks
Symmetry Magazine - 23 Jun 2014 23:49
A new result from the Large Hadron Collider strengthens the case that the Higgs interacts with both types of particles in the Standard Model. Scientists reported in Nature Physics this week that they have found substanti...
Senses and Non-Sense: 7 Odd Hallucinations
Live Science - 23 Jun 2014 23:16
Here is a look at seven odd hallucinations, which show that anything is possible when the brain takes a break from reality.
Bumble Inn: New England Gets New 'Hotel' for Pollinators
Live Science - 23 Jun 2014 22:36
A newly-constructed "bee hotel" at the University of New Hampshire is at the center of the first-ever comprehensive study of New England's bee population.
From Genes to Motherhood: 6 Reasons More Women Get Depressed
Live Science - 23 Jun 2014 22:13
Women are more likely than men to develop depression during their lifetime. Here's a look at the reasons for this difference between the genders.
7 Public Domain Physics Comics Worth Reading
Physics Buzz - 23 Jun 2014 21:42
The Golden Age of comic books stretched from the 1930s through the 1950s and overlapped with a time of unbridled optimism about the progress of science. People wanted to know about how the latest technology worked, and L...
Ferroelectric switching seen in biological tissues
Phys.org - 23 Jun 2014 21:35
Measurements taken at the molecular scale have for the first time confirmed a key property that could improve our knowledge of how the heart and lungs function.
Tempted by Cookies? New Way to Boost Self-Control Found
Live Science - 23 Jun 2014 21:01
Reframing the consequences of choices could help people boost their self-control and delay gratification, researchers say, a finding that has implications for diet, exercise and even financial decisions.
Chomping Invaders! Alien Trap-Jaw Ants Spread Along Gulf Coast
Live Science - 23 Jun 2014 21:00
An aggressive type of trap-jaw ant with a mighty bite is gaining ground in the U.S. southeast, new research finds. The species, Odontomachus haematodus, is native to South America, but it seems to have spread recently al...
This vast lake will die so millions can live better
New Scientist - 23 Jun 2014 21:00
Kenya's Lake Turkana is vital for local wildlife and livelihoods, but Africa's tallest dam is going to choke it to provide much-needed power and water (full text available to subscribers)
Scientists use X-rays to look at how DNA protects itself from UV light
Phys.org - 23 Jun 2014 20:46
The molecular building blocks that make up DNA absorb ultraviolet light so strongly that sunlight should deactivate them - yet it does not. Now scientists have made detailed observations of a "relaxation response" that p...
Highest Global Temps on Record for Month of May
Live Science - 23 Jun 2014 20:44
May was the warmest month ever measured on Earth since the 1880s, when cowboys battled in Wild West shootouts and the State of Liberty was built.
Logical armour: A primer in mathematical self-defence
New Scientist - 23 Jun 2014 20:00
Can you spot a fake health crisis? Are politicians bamboozling you with numbers? Mathematics can open your eyes, says Jordan Ellenberg in How Not to Be Wrong
Clingy dark matter may slow the spin of corpse stars
New Scientist - 23 Jun 2014 19:28
Dark matter with a tiny electrical charge could put the brakes on pulsars, offering a new way to look for clues to the nature of the mysterious substance
Quartet of Lights Make Russia Glow in New Space Photo
Live Science - 23 Jun 2014 19:04
City lights, the aurora, the moon and a beautiful blue glow from the atmosphere create a gorgeous show in a new astronaut photograph of Russia.
Higgs Boson Confirms Reigning Physics Model Yet Again
Live Science - 23 Jun 2014 18:49
The Higgs boson decays into matter-carrying particles known as tau leptons, yet another confirmation of the standard model of physics.
Bacteria in Arteries May Be 'Ticking Time Bombs,' Researchers Say
Live Science - 23 Jun 2014 18:45
It's long been thought that stress can trigger heart attacks, and now researchers say they may know how -- in stressed people, heart attacks might be triggered by bacteria dispersing within artery walls.
Ti-V alloys' superconductivity: Inherent, not accidental
Phys.org - 23 Jun 2014 18:36
Physicists from India have shed new light on a long-unanswered question related to superconductivity in so-called transition metal binary alloys. The team revealed that the local magnetic fluctuations, or spin fluctuatio...
D-Wave and predecessors: From simulated to quantum annealing
Phys.org - 23 Jun 2014 18:33
The D-Wave computer is currently the latest link of a long chain of computers designed for the solution of optimization problems. In what sense does it realize quantum computation? We describe the evolution of such compu...
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New Scientist - 23 Jun 2014 18:30
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