Sign In
to Vote &
Create Storyboards.
 

Science News

Location American Science News for 2 February 2015
Nuclear pasta may offer insight into strange world of neutron stars (Phys.org)--Neutron stars, which form when massive stars collapse under their own enormous gravity, are some of the densest objects in the universe, second only to black holes. Yet while little is known about the interio...
Read More
2
0
(Technische Universitaet Muenchen) 'Innovations, Information, and Imaging' is the theme of the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2015), which takes place in San Jose Feb. 12 ...
Read More
2
0

To save your energy while strolling, walk this sway

e! Science News - 2 Feb 2015 23:34
When participants in a charity event took the first walk across the newly opened London Millennium Footbridge in 2000, their feet fell into sync, and the natural side-to-side motion of their steps caused the suspension b...
Read More
1
0
To save your energy while strolling, walk this sway When participants in a charity event took the first walk across the newly opened London Millennium Footbridge in 2000, their feet fell into sync, and the natural side-to-side motion of their steps caused the suspension b...
Read More
1
0

Recalibrating after rejection

Elisabeth Howell - 2 Feb 2015 22:53
Recalibrating after rejection One of my favourite astronaut stories is about Clay Anderson. He was rejected 15 times by NASA and as the story goes, decided his 16th try would be the last one. But we all know he got in. He flew twice in space before h...
Read More
1
0
Engineers use disorder to control light on a nanoscale A breakthrough by a team of researchers from UCLA, Columbia University and other institutions could lead to the more precise transfer of information in computer chips, as well as new types of optical materials for light ...
Read More
1
0
5 Unexpected Home Hazards Send Too Many Kids to the ER (Op-Ed) Sure you keep your kids away from your oven, but what about your purse?
Read More
1
0
Prehistoric High Times: Early Humans Used Magic Mushrooms, Opium Opium, "magic" mushrooms and other psychoactive substances have been used since prehistoric times by people all over the world, according to a new study.
Read More
1
0
Team shows how 'spontaneous' social norms emerge Fifteen years ago, the name "Aiden" was hardly on the radar of Americans with new babies. It ranked a lowly 324th on the Social Security Administration's list of popular baby names. But less than a decade later, the name...
Read More
1
0

Formation-flying birds swap places to share out lift

New Scientist - 2 Feb 2015 22:00
Birds that benefit from each other's aerodynamic lift take turns to do the harder work out front - a rare example of reciprocal altruism
Read More
1
0
Groundhog Day: How Often Does Punxsutawney Phil Get It Right? Every February, a small, furry mammal with buck teeth gets trotted out in front of a crowd in Pennsylvania to take part in a time-honored Groundhog Day tradition: If the beloved groundhog Punxsutawney Phil "sees" his sha...
Read More
1
0

Gravitational Waves Discovery Now Officially Dead

Scientific American - 2 Feb 2015 21:30
Gravitational Waves Discovery Now Officially Dead Data from the South Pole experiment BICEP2 and the Planck probe point to galactic dust as a confounding signal --
Read More
1
0
'Missing Oil' from 2010 BP Spill Found on Gulf Seafloor Up to 10 million gallons (38 million liters) of crude oil from the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill has settled at the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico, where it is threatening wildlife and marine ecosystems, according to a ...
Read More
1
0
Obama wants to cut ozone pollution, but Republicans are crying foul over the cost. Europe is being tougher... or is it? Much is obfuscation, finds Fred Pearce
Read More
1
0
Imagine a future when promising drugs won't take a decade to develop, when early success more often translates to later adoption, and when we no longer need to rely on animal testing. After decades of...
Read More
1
0

Today on New Scientist

New Scientist - 2 Feb 2015 19:30
All the latest on newscientist.com: urban rabbits downsize warrens, origins of life could be preserved on the moon, microbes built gold hoard and more
Read More
1
0
NYU's microscopic monitoring may yield advances in production of products, pharmaceuticals A team of NYU physicists has developed a method to monitor the properties of microscopic particles as they grow within a chemical reaction vessel, creating new opportunities to improve the quality and consistency of a wi...
Read More
1
0

Dead star leaves behind Jupiter's Ghost

New Scientist - 2 Feb 2015 18:56
Not every star ends with a bang. A beautiful post-mortem portrait reveals a cloud of gas surrounding a jewel-like white dwarf
Read More
1
0
New experiments suggest that if life-bearing meteorites hit the young, molten moon, they could have been preserved until today
Read More
1
0
Lava Bomb Fossils Hold Clues to Islands' Fiery Origin Tiny marine fossils that shot to the surface in El Hierro volcano's steaming lava bombs could help unravel the ancestry of the Canary Islands volcanic chain.
Read More
1
0
F-35 Fighter Jet Tested in Extreme Weather Conditions Solar radiation, freezing rain, dense fog: The F-35 Joint Strike Fighter warplane can withstand all that and more, according to U.S. Air Force officials.
Read More
1
0

Gallery: Eerie Rocks From El Hierro Volcano

Live Science - 2 Feb 2015 18:08
Gallery: Eerie Rocks From El Hierro Volcano During the October 2011 eruption of El Hierro volcano, hundreds of steaming volcanic "bombs" appeared floating on the sea surface about 1.2 miles (2 kilometers) offshore La Restinga village.
Read More
1
0

{TITLE}

{PUBLISHER} - {PUBLISHED_DATE}
{TITLE} {CONTENT}
Read More
{VIEWS}
0


Storyboard
Print
{VIEWS}
0
0




Share this Article

Location



Create Storyboard