Science News
New Peanut Allergy Treatment Shows Promise
Live Science - 30 Jan 2015 13:58
Children with peanut allergies who tried a new treatment involving probiotics wound up being able to eat peanuts without a reaction, a new study from Australia says.
Los Alamos develops new technique for growing high-efficiency perovskite solar cells
e! Science News - 30 Jan 2015 00:32
This week in the journal Science, Los Alamos National Laboratory researchers reveal a new solution-based hot-casting technique that allows growth of highly efficient and reproducible solar cells from large-area perovskit...
Can Science Solve the Mystery of "Deflategate"? [Video]
Scientific American - 30 Jan 2015 00:15
Even with the physics sorted out, questions remain --
Evidence mounts for quantum criticality theory
Phys.org - 30 Jan 2015 22:11
A new study by a team of physicists at Rice University, Zhejiang University, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Florida State University and the Max Planck Institute adds to the growing body of evidence supporting a theory ...
No, Gwyneth Paltrow, Vaginas Don't Need to Be Steam Cleaned
Live Science - 30 Jan 2015 22:01
No, steaming your vagina will not balance female hormones, cure infertility or reduce menstrual cramps.
Cosmic inflation remains undiscovered
Symmetry Magazine - 30 Jan 2015 21:02
A new study puts earlier discovery claims into perspective. A previous study claiming the discovery of gravitational waves as cosmic inflation’s fingerprint has most likely been over-interpreted, scientists found in a ...
650-Year Drought Triggered Ancient City's Abandonment
Live Science - 30 Jan 2015 20:56
A once-thriving Mesoamerican metropolis dried up about 1,000 years ago when below-average rainfall triggered centuries-long droughts that largely prompted people to abandon the city for greener opportunities, a new study...
Greenland's Hidden Ice Layers Revealed in New Map
Live Science - 30 Jan 2015 20:39
Layer by layer, scientists have filled in the hidden expanse of Greenland's vast ice sheet, revealing where the island hides its oldest ice.
Rock Art On Earth Draws Scientists to Ancient Lakes
Live Science - 30 Jan 2015 20:12
Seven thousand year-old rock paintings in the Sahara desert have, somewhat serendipitously, helped uncover evidence of ancient lake beds.
The Hunt for Alien Extremophiles is Taking Off (Kavli Q+A)
Live Science - 30 Jan 2015 19:16This Week's Awesome Stories from Around the Web (Through Jan 30)
Singularity Hub - 30 Jan 2015 19:10
Some news stories are about iterative steps, others about significant strides. Then there's this week's batch of stories that, one way or another, are all about moonshots. We know that the future will be...
The Final Word on DeflateGate
Physics Buzz - 30 Jan 2015 19:04
Start with the ideal gas law: PV=nRTRearrange Article TL:DR? Try this chart instead. P/T=nR/VUse a little logicP1/T1=nR/V=P2/T2 or P1/T1=P2/T2Rearrange again to getT2(P1/T1)=P2 Now just plug in the numbers, bearing in ...
Crude Conspiracies? Data Suggest Nations Do Go to War Over Oil (Op-Ed)
Live Science - 30 Jan 2015 18:57
The "thirst for oil" is often put forward as a near self-evident explanation behind military interventions in Libya, for instance, or Sudan. Oil, or the lack of oil, is also said to be behind the absence of intervention ...
X-Rays at War, 1915
Scientific American - 30 Jan 2015 17:30
Reported in Scientific American, This Week in World War I: January 30, 1915 X-rays were used for medical operations within a couple of months after they were discovered by Wilhelm Roentgen in late... --
Sync your sport to your body clock for a personal best
New Scientist - 30 Jan 2015 17:21
Larks and night owls perform drastically better if a sporting event is timed to suit their circadian rhythm
Black holes do not exist where space and time do not exist, says new theory
Phys.org - 30 Jan 2015 17:00
(Phys.org) --The quintessential feature of a black hole is its "point of no return," or what is more technically called its event horizon. When anything--a star, a particle, or wayward human--crosses this horizon, the bl...
Cancer-warped skeletons imagined for building design
New Scientist - 30 Jan 2015 17:00
The extreme deformities caused by bone cancer push the human body to its limits. Our amazing ability to adapt could inspire future architecture
Scaling up armor systems
Phys.org - 30 Jan 2015 16:30
Dermal modification is a significant part of evolution, says Ranajay Ghosh, an associate research scientist in the College of Engineering. Almost every organism has something on its skin that provides important survival ...
Seeking cracks in the Standard Model
Phys.org - 30 Jan 2015 16:00
In particle physics, it's our business to understand structure. I work on the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) and this machine lets us see and study the smallest structure of all; unimaginably tiny fundamental particles, hel...
The world's wellness obsession has gone too far
New Scientist - 30 Jan 2015 15:46
Being urged to optimise every aspect of our lives to improve well-being is sometimes counterproductive, say André Spicer and Carl Cederström
The first optically synchronised free-electron laser
Phys.org - 30 Jan 2015 15:44
Scientists at DESY have developed and implemented an optical synchronisation system for the soft X-ray free-electron laser FLASH, achieving facility-wide synchronisation with femtosecond precision. The performance of the...
Facebook Users Aren't Bragging -- Really!
Live Science - 30 Jan 2015 15:37
Facebook is a more positive than negative place, but users spreading happy news actually try not to brag, a new study finds.