Science News
170-Year-Old Shipwreck Beer Smells Gross
Live Science - 5 Mar 2015 22:05
Scientists opened two bottles of beer from a shipwreck off the coast of Finland to get a profile of the 19th century brews. The discovered some unpleasant smells.
The law and unintended consequences
The Economist - 5 Mar 2015 17:49
COMPUTERS are notoriously insecure. Usually, this is by accident rather than design. Modern operating systems contain millions of lines of code, with millions more in the applications that do the things people want done....
Explainer: What is a superconductor?
Phys.org - 5 Mar 2015 15:00
Materials can be divided into two categories based on their ability to conduct electricity. Metals, such as copper and silver, allow electrons to move freely and carry with them electrical charge. Insulators, such as rub...
Snowflakes Aren't Even Like Themselves, New 3D Images Reveal
Live Science - 5 Mar 2015 08:14
You've seen the greeting cards and the (possibly doctored) black and white photographs, but what do snowflakes really look like?
CRE: Causes, Symptoms & Treatment
Live Science - 5 Mar 2015 06:50
CRE are a type of bacteria that have become resistant to most antibiotics. Infections usually occur in health care settings.
Bringing Fish Up from the Deep
KQED Quest - 5 Mar 2015 23:13
Scientists at the California Academy of Sciences have designed a portable decompression chamber to safely bring new fish species up from the twilight zone.
New detector sniffs out origins of methane
e! Science News - 5 Mar 2015 23:03
Methane is a potent greenhouse gas, second only to carbon dioxide in its capacity to trap heat in Earth's atmosphere for a long time. The gas can originate from lakes and swamps, natural-gas pipelines, deep-sea vents, an...
Origami doughnut squashes up to protect what's inside
New Scientist - 5 Mar 2015 23:00
The folds on this paper ring are precision-made by a laser so that when it's compressed, the hole at its centre stays the same size and protects its contents
General Relativity at 100: Einstein's Famous Theory Has Aged Well
Live Science - 5 Mar 2015 22:40
The famous theory, which Einstein published in 1915, remains the bedrock upon which scientists' understanding of the origin and evolution of the universe rests.
Not just a headache: How migraine changes your brain
New Scientist - 5 Mar 2015 22:00
Migraine changes the way you experience the world all the time, not just during an attack. It's time for a new approach to treatment (full text available to subscribers)
6 Ways Albert Einstein Fought for Civil Rights
Live Science - 5 Mar 2015 21:09
Most people know that Einstein was an anti-war activist, but after moving to the United States in 1933 and becoming a U.S. citizen, Einstein also confronted American racism.
Fast star first fled from a supernova, now the galaxy
New Scientist - 5 Mar 2015 21:00
The fastest star in the Milky Way is high-tailing it out of here at 1200 kilometres a second after surviving its sibling star's death as a massive supernova
Flu Hospitalizations Soar Among Older Adults, Report Finds
Live Science - 5 Mar 2015 20:55
This flu season has been particularly severe for older adults, with the highest rate of hospitalizations among this age group in a decade.
Today on New Scientist
New Scientist - 5 Mar 2015 20:05
All the latest on newscientist.com: the revamped Large Hadron Collider, an acrobatic praying mantis, the future of perfume, and more
Modified E. coli spin fibres as tough as spider silk
New Scientist - 5 Mar 2015 20:00
Bacteria with added spider genes have made molecules that can be combined to create strands that are less strong but more elastic than a spider's silk
How Lab Rats Are Changing Our View of Obesity
Live Science - 5 Mar 2015 19:58
New study findings may flesh out chemical influences.
Doctor Who Was Possibly Exposed to Ebola Receives Experimental Vaccine
Live Science - 5 Mar 2015 19:44
A doctor who was treating Ebola patients in Africa suddenly found himself in a scary situation: He was accidently stuck with a needle that had been used on a patient.
The skull that chews up theories of human ancestry
New Scientist - 5 Mar 2015 19:30
A fossil skull fragment from 1.8 million years ago has been rebuilt in a computer and is shedding light on the evolution of our early ancestors
VTT: New flavors for lager beer -- successful generation of hybrid yeasts
e! Science News - 5 Mar 2015 19:05
VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland Ltd has been the first to publish a scientific study on the successful generation of hybrid lager yeasts. For centuries the same few yeast strains have been used in the production...
Watch a praying mantis perform acrobatic jumps
New Scientist - 5 Mar 2015 19:00
Detailed videos of leaping mantises reveal how they twist their bodies and limbs to reach their targets
Post-menopausal orcas' wisdom helps family survive
New Scientist - 5 Mar 2015 19:00
Wisdom of the elders may help killer whales make it through rough times, with older females leading the pods to salmon feeding grounds
The rub with friction
e! Science News - 5 Mar 2015 18:22
Here's the rub with friction -- scientists don't really know how it works. Sure, humans have been harnessing the power of friction since rubbing two sticks together to build the first fire, but the physics of friction re...