Science News
Handstand Pushups Cause Man to Lose Vision Temporarily
Live Science - 9 Dec 2014 16:22
Injuries from working out at the gym are not uncommon, but some are more unusual than others. In a recent case, a 32-year-old man lost his vision in one eye after an intense session of handstand pushups.
Tech that Checks Your Vital Signs Could Find What Docs Miss
Live Science - 9 Dec 2014 01:31
Your vital signs get checked every time you have a medical condition. One doctor argues these markers of body's condition should be monitored continuously, maybe even before a person has developed a health problem.
Penn researchers show commonalities in how different glassy materials fail
e! Science News - 9 Dec 2014 23:59
Glass is mysterious. It is a broad class of materials that extends well beyond the everyday window pane, but one thing that these disparate glasses seem to have in common is that they have nothing in common when it comes...
Germanium comes home to Purdue for semiconductor milestone
e! Science News - 9 Dec 2014 23:58
A laboratory at Purdue University provided a critical part of the world's first transistor in 1947 -- the purified germanium semiconductor -- and now researchers here are on the forefront of a new germanium milestone.
Nanoscale resistors for quantum devices
e! Science News - 9 Dec 2014 23:57
The electrical characteristics of new thin-film chromium oxide resistors that can be tuned by controlling the oxygen content detailed in the Journal of Applied Physics. Researchers from the London Centre for Nanotechnolo...
Composite materials can be designed in a supercomputer 'virtual lab'
e! Science News - 9 Dec 2014 23:57
UCL scientists have shown how advanced computer simulations can be used to design new composite materials. Nanocomposites, which are widely used in industry, are revolutionary materials in which microscopic particles are...
Math for Drones, Self-Driving Cars Wins Top Student Science Award
Live Science - 9 Dec 2014 23:55
Mathematical research that could help drones navigate, and computer models for how trees grow snagged top honors at a national student math and science competition, the event's organizers announced today (Dec. 9).
Light-based technology tracks oxygen levels underwater for swim performance, muscle repair
Phys.org - 9 Dec 2014 23:29
Swimmers looking to monitor and improve technique and patients striving to heal injured muscles now have a new light-based tool to help reach their goals. A research article by scientists at the University of Essex in Co...
Physicist helps write the (very big) book on two major physics experiments
Phys.org - 9 Dec 2014 23:28
Soeren Prell reached for the bookshelf behind his desk and pulled down a binder thick and heavy with 900 pages documenting the lives and discoveries of two major physics experiments.
US Airports Screened 2,000 Travelers for Ebola, But Found No Cases
Live Science - 9 Dec 2014 22:37
Nearly 2,000 travelers from Ebola-affected countries have arrived at five U.S. airports in recent weeks, according to a new report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Weird Fossil Reveals Ancient Balloon Animal
Live Science - 9 Dec 2014 22:13
A bizarre fossil found in China looks like a bird's nest but is actually the remains of an animal shaped like a spiny balloon. The creature appears to have no living evolutionary descendants.
10 Things You Didn't Know About Spiders
Live Science - 9 Dec 2014 22:00
How much do you know about creepy and crawly spiders?
What Pacific islanders have taught me about friendship
New Scientist - 9 Dec 2014 22:00
Human culture is about survival of the friendliest, says anthropologist John Edward Terrell - and Westerners could learn from more traditional societies (full text available to subscribers)
New 'Smart Skin' Could Make Prosthetics More Like Real Limbs
Live Science - 9 Dec 2014 21:49
New prosthetic skin that is warm and elastic like real skin, and is packed with many different kinds of sensors, could one day help people with prosthetic limbs regain their sense of touch, researchers say.
Guiding African Wildlife Through Global Warming
Live Science - 9 Dec 2014 21:15The wonders of orchids: Beautiful, smelly and sexy
New Scientist - 9 Dec 2014 21:00
Darwin would have been amazed by the leaps in our knowledge about his favourite flowers, cleverly described in Darwin's Orchids: Then & now
Quasars, Black Holes, and the Origins of “Intercontinental Radio Astronomy”
Scientific American - 9 Dec 2014 20:36
Not long ago I came across a piece in the Scientific American archives from the earliest days of very-long baseline radio interferometry, the technique employed by the Event Horizon Telescope. --
Moving objects make hummingbirds wobble mid-flight
New Scientist - 9 Dec 2014 20:05
Immersing hummingbirds in virtual reality is revealing that they are surprisingly sensitive to a moving view
Critically Endangered Porpoise Could Be Extinct in Four Years
Live Science - 9 Dec 2014 20:01
The world's most endangered porpoise could go extinct in four or five years if the Mexican government doesn't step up enforcement against illegal fishing.
In Photos: The World's Most Endangered Marine Mammal
Live Science - 9 Dec 2014 20:01
Illegal gillnet fishing in the Gulf of California is driving the vaquita, a tiny, critically endangered and elusive porpoise, to extinction.
Hearing the Pianist's Fingers: The Importance of Touch in Piano Music
Physics Buzz - 9 Dec 2014 19:42
Credit: Lecates via Wikimedia Commons Can you tell the difference between the two tones played in this recording?I'm not convinced that I can, but a group of trained musicians were able to listen to a series of tones li...
North Pole's Reindeer Population Plummets
Live Science - 9 Dec 2014 19:34
Inbreeding, poaching, a lack of herders and climate change are contributing to the iconic animal's decline.