Science News
Women Seeking Flextime Pay Heavier Price Than Men
Live Science - 21 Aug 2014 18:56
Women are perceived as less likable and competent than men when they ask for flexible work arrangements to accommodate childcare responsibilities, a new study suggests.
What the Deep Sea Sounds Like
Live Science - 21 Aug 2014 22:46Water window imaging opportunity
e! Science News - 21 Aug 2014 22:32
Ever heard of the water window? It consists of radiations in the 3.3 to 4.4 nanometre range, which are not absorbed by the water in biological tissues. New theoretical findings show that it is possible to develop coheren...
Researchers develop models to study polyelectrolytes, including DNA and RNA
e! Science News - 21 Aug 2014 22:29
Researchers from North Carolina State University have developed a novel and versatile modeling strategy to simulate polyelectrolyte systems. The model has applications for creating new materials as well as for studying p...
Science Media Beset with Gender Gaps
Scientific American - 21 Aug 2014 21:52
In the fall of 2005, I and a couple hundred other new students at Columbia University's journalism school walked into a lecture hall for a series of welcome speeches, and two things happened that... --
The Philosophy of Guessing Has Harmed Physics, Expert Says
Scientific American - 21 Aug 2014 21:27
As readers of this blog know, late last spring I spoke at a cool conference in England called How the Light Gets In, where I hung out with all kinds of professional reality-ponderers. --
Weapons Can Be Carried Easily Through The TSA's Full-Body "Naked" Scanners
Popular Science - 21 Aug 2014 21:07
Hovav Shacham, one of the security researchers who conducted the study, poses for a full-body scan. Erik Jepsen/UC San Diego Publications Since 2010, the Transportation Security Administration has largely dismissed the p...
Trippy tots: How to see the world as a baby
New Scientist - 21 Aug 2014 21:00
We've all been there, and none of us remembers. But psychedelic drugs, love and travel are just some of the ways we can roll parts of our brain back to infancy (full text available to subscribers)
Viruses Deflate Huge Algal Blooms at Sea
Live Science - 21 Aug 2014 20:18
Gobs of microscopic organisms called algae may have met their match in viruses that can invade their cells, ultimately leading to death, new research suggests.
Sickly Coral Reefs Fail the Smell Test
Live Science - 21 Aug 2014 20:05
When looking for a place to settle down, young corals and fish use chemical cues to sniff out bad neighborhoods littered with seaweed.
Cured Ebola Patient: 'God Saved My Life'
Live Science - 21 Aug 2014 20:04
Dr. Kent Brantly, an American doctor who contracted the Ebola virus in West Africa, is cured of the disease and was released today from Emory University Hospital in Atlanta.
High 'n' Dry: GPS Offers New Way to Measure Drought
Live Science - 21 Aug 2014 20:03
The western United States has suffered a crippling drought for the past three years, but researchers now have a fuller picture of the extent of damage, thanks to a new way to measure how much water has been lost.
Has Earth's Missing Heat Been Found?
Live Science - 21 Aug 2014 20:01
A new study suggests a natural climate cycle in the North Atlantic gobbled Earth's extra heat, putting global warming on pause.
X-ray laser probes tiny quantum tornadoes in superfluid droplets
Phys.org - 21 Aug 2014 20:00
An experiment at the Department of Energy's SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory revealed a well-organized 3-D grid of quantum "tornadoes" inside microscopic droplets of supercooled liquid helium - the first time this fo...
Hummingbirds turned savoury into sweet to taste nectar
New Scientist - 21 Aug 2014 20:00
Birds lost the taste receptors for sugar, but hummingbirds clearly have a sweet tooth. Now we know how they regained it
Earliest stars lived short, fiery lives
New Scientist - 21 Aug 2014 20:00
The chemical fingerprint of an ancient star suggests its predecessors were more massive than thought, ending up as huge supernovae
China sting shows censors fear posts that incite unrest
New Scientist - 21 Aug 2014 20:00
Undercover look into the secrets of China's online censorship system shows how anything that encourages collective action makes the authorities nervous
Earth's Eastern Hemisphere Stuns in Photo from Space
Live Science - 21 Aug 2014 19:23
The Earth-orbiting Suomi NPP satellite has spit out some breathtaking shots of humanity's home planet, including one of the Eastern Hemisphere released yesterday that shows swirls of clouds above a blue, green and brown ...
Your Legacy: Getting Off This Rock
Singularity Hub - 21 Aug 2014 18:50
We just celebrated the 45th anniversary of the Apollo 11 Moon landing. The fact that we went to the Moon with 1960s technology is ...
Today on New Scientist
New Scientist - 21 Aug 2014 18:30
All the latest on newscientist.com: why are IQs falling? Google's Knowledge Vault, last days of Neanderthals, ever-bigger spiders in Australia and more
Hot and Getting Hotter: Heat Islands Cooking US Cities
Live Science - 21 Aug 2014 18:13
Since 1970, cities have been warming, and have been getting hotter far faster than adjacent rural areas
Discovery Of Microbes Under Antarctic Ice Has Implications For Finding Life Elsewhere In Solar System
IBTimes - 21 Aug 2014 17:34
A team of researchers has discovered microbial life in a lake nearly 2,600 feet below the Antarctic ice sheet, the first evidence that life can exist in such a cold, dark world. The latest discovery further bolsters the ...