Science News
America's Last Major Particle Collider Awakens
Scientific American - 6 Apr 2015 14:30
The Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider, which operates at a lower energy than the Large Hadron Collider in Europe, recently fired up for its 15th run to look at quarks and gluons --
Breast Milk Sold Online May Not Be 100% Human Milk
Live Science - 6 Apr 2015 08:37
People who buy breastmilk online for their babies may be getting something they didn't ask for.
11 Weight-Loss Programs After 1 Year: Which Work?
Live Science - 6 Apr 2015 23:31
Researchers scoured the medical literature, looking for long-term, rigorous studies of weight loss programs. Here's what they found.
Sound separates cancer cells from blood samples
e! Science News - 6 Apr 2015 23:21
Separating circulating cancer cells from blood cells for diagnostic, prognostic and treatment purposes may become much easier using an acoustic separation method and an inexpensive, disposable chip, according to a team o...
Robot Reveals Sea Life Thriving Beneath Antarctic Ice
Live Science - 6 Apr 2015 23:07
The water beneath Antarctica's thick ice may be dark and chilly, but it still harbors a surprising amount of sea life, including sea stars, sponges and anemones, according to a new underwater robotic expedition.
Aluminum battery from Stanford offers safe alternative to conventional batteries
e! Science News - 6 Apr 2015 23:01
Stanford University scientists have invented the first high-performance aluminum battery that's fast-charging, long-lasting and inexpensive. Researchers say the new technology offers a safe alternative to many commercial...
5 Odd Animals That Shapeshift
Live Science - 6 Apr 2015 22:59
Animals come in all different shapes and sizes, but only a few can change their shapes.
Better sensors for medical imaging, contraband detection
e! Science News - 6 Apr 2015 22:51
MIT researchers have developed a new, ultrasensitive magnetic-field detector that is 1,000 times more energy-efficient than its predecessors. It could lead to miniaturized, battery-powered devices for medical and materia...
MRSA Superbug May Get Stronger If You Smoke
Live Science - 6 Apr 2015 22:50
When exposed to cigarette smoke, MRSA bacteria get stronger, a new study finds.
Under the microscope, strong-swimming swamp bacteria spontaneously organize into crystals
Phys.org - 6 Apr 2015 22:32
Insects form swarms, fish school, birds flock together. Likewise, one species of bacteria forms dynamic, living crystals, says new research from Rockefeller University. Biophysicists have revealed that fast-swimming, sul...
Accelerating materials discovery with world's largest database of elastic properties
e! Science News - 6 Apr 2015 22:21
Scientists at the Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) have published the world's largest set of data on the complete elastic properties of inorganic compounds, increasing by an ord...
Magnetic-field detector is 1,000 times more efficient than its predecessors
Phys.org - 6 Apr 2015 22:04
MIT researchers have developed a new, ultrasensitive magnetic-field detector that is 1,000 times more energy-efficient than its predecessors. It could lead to miniaturized, battery-powered devices for medical and materia...
Near-Death Experiences: What Happens in the Brain Before Dying
Live Science - 6 Apr 2015 22:02
In the moments before death, conventional wisdom says that as the heart stops beating and blood stops flowing, the rest of the body slowly shuts down. But a new study suggests this view may in fact be wrong.
Robot Finds Antarctic Life At 'Never Visited Depths' | Video
Live Science - 6 Apr 2015 20:19
A Georgia Institute of Technology robotic vehicle, named Icefin, was deployed 1640+ feet below the Ross Ice Shelf to the seafloor and it found sea stars, sponges, anemones and more.
Eye of the Beholder: Life through the camera obscura
New Scientist - 6 Apr 2015 19:00
Both 17th-century artist Vermeer and scientist van Leeuwenhoek made pioneering use of optics. A joint biography shows how they changed our world view
Ghostly Faces and Invisible Verse Found in Medieval Text
Live Science - 6 Apr 2015 18:43
Ghostly faces and lines of verse previously invisible have been uncovered in the "Black Book of Carmarthen," the oldest surviving medieval manuscript written solely in Welsh. The book holds some of the earliest reference...
In Photos: Medieval Manuscript Reveals Ghostly Faces
Live Science - 6 Apr 2015 18:22
A 750-year-old medieval manuscript, the oldest surviving medieval text written solely in Welsh, has revealed even more intrigue, as researchers have uncovered once-hidden ghostly faces and text on the vellum pages.
Want to Live Longer? Optimal Amount of Exercise Revealed
Live Science - 6 Apr 2015 17:03
Doing a few hours of exercise every week will probably help you live longer, but doing a whole lot more exercise doesn't provide much extra benefit, according to a new study.
Rising Billions--Dramatic (Positive) Change
Singularity Hub - 6 Apr 2015 17:00
The most dramatic (positive) change in our global economy is about to occur between 2016 and 2020. Three to five billion new consumers, who have never purchased anything, never uploaded...
Western Canada's glaciers may all but vanish by 2100
New Scientist - 6 Apr 2015 17:00
The first major study to consider the way melting glaciers move and change shape produces much bleaker predictions of their disappearance
Physicists propose method to measure variations in the speed of light
Phys.org - 6 Apr 2015 15:30
(Phys.org)--The speed of light, c, is one of the best-known constants, having a value of just under 300,000,000 meters per second in a vacuum. But in some alternative theories of cosmology, the speed of light is not actu...
Watch the First Artificial Gravity Experiment
Scientific American - 6 Apr 2015 15:13
Gravity, as the old joke goes, sucks. It drags us down, pulls on our weary limbs, makes our feet tired, makes parts of us droop. But it’s also a critical factor for our long term well-being. --