Science News
Discover the Chemical Composition of Everyday Stuff...With a Smartphone Camera
Singularity Hub - 17 Apr 2015 17:00
Our smartphones can do a lot--compute, pin down our location, sense motion and orientation, send and receive wireless signals, take photographs and video. What if you could also learn exactly what...
How to maximize the superconducting critical temperature in a molecular superconductor
Phys.org - 17 Apr 2015 21:24
An international research team, led by Professor Kosmas Prassides of Tohoku University, has investigated the electronic properties of the family of unconventional superconductors based on fullerenes which have the highes...
11,000 Years of Isolation: Remote Village Has Unusual Gut Bacteria
Live Science - 17 Apr 2015 21:45
A medical checkup of people living in remote villages deep in the Amazon rainforest in Venezuela has uncovered striking details about these villagers' microbiomes, the bacteria living on and in their bodies, a new study ...
2015 Already Setting Heat Records
Live Science - 17 Apr 2015 22:40
The first three months of 2015 set new global heat records.
Culture clash: When scientists must tread with care
New Scientist - 17 Apr 2015 22:00
Science loses when traditional beliefs obstruct its way - but might lose more if it steamrollers over believers' objections, too
New paper opens the door to the study of a new class of materials
Phys.org - 17 Apr 2015 21:27
A new paper by a team of researchers led by Karel Matous, College of Engineering Associate Professor of Computational Mechanics in the Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering at the University of Notre Dame, d...
Dog Flu Outbreak: What You Need to Know
Live Science - 17 Apr 2015 21:05
The outbreak of flu that has sickened thousands of dogs in the Midwest is a new strain that likely came from Asia, experts say.
Making Sense of Scents: Why Odors Spark Memory (Podcast)
Live Science - 17 Apr 2015 20:35
What makes scent such a powerful tool to "transport" you back in time?
Is super-diverse Amazon microbiome something to strive for?
New Scientist - 17 Apr 2015 20:00
The Yanomami people in the Venezuelan rainforest have the most diverse population of gut microbes ever seen, far more varied than Western guts. Does it matter?
After the spill: Mystery of the vanishing Gulf of Mexico turtles
New Scientist - 17 Apr 2015 19:32
Five years on from the worst oil spill in US history, turtle populations are struggling, dolphins are in ill health and whales have lost habitat
Found Physics - Scratch Holograms
Physics Buzz - 17 Apr 2015 19:22
I'm always intrigued when I stumble across a cool physics phenomenon that most people would tend to pass by without a second thought. One of my favorite overlooked physics effects is scratch holograms. They can turn up j...
Wild chimps look both ways before crossing roads
New Scientist - 17 Apr 2015 19:00
A busy highway in Uganda is a potential death trap, but chimps have learned to look before running across, and they even wait for those less able to cross
Biocode mixes art and academia to explore pigeonholing
New Scientist - 17 Apr 2015 18:11
A conference on the fallibility of humans' propensity to categorise proves to be a pleasurable romp through unmapped territories
Photos: World War II-era Aircraft Carrier Discovered
Live Science - 17 Apr 2015 17:44
Images reveal the location and state of the USS Independence, an aircraft carrier involved in WW II and in atomic bomb testing.
Alien Supercivilizations Absent from 100,000 Nearby Galaxies
Scientific American - 17 Apr 2015 17:25
The most far-seeing search ever performed for “Dyson spheres” and other artifacts of “astroengineering” comes up empty. Where is everybody? --
Claiming sexism in science is over is just wishful thinking
New Scientist - 17 Apr 2015 17:14
Discrimination against women in the race for key science jobs has vanished, says the latest research. New Scientist's Lisa Grossman begs to differ
Boron-based atomic clusters mimic rare-earth metals
Phys.org - 17 Apr 2015 17:00
Rare Earth elements, found in the f-block of the periodic table, have particular magnetic and optical properties that make them valuable commodities. This has been particularly true over the last thirty years as more tec...
Thumbnail track pad
e! Science News - 17 Apr 2015 16:08
Researchers at the MIT Media Laboratory are developing a new wearable device that turns the user's thumbnail into a miniature wireless track pad.
WWII Ship Used for Atomic Bomb Tests Found 'Amazingly Intact'
Live Science - 17 Apr 2015 16:08
An underwater robot has created a detailed sonar image of the huge aircraft carrier, revealing it is slightly tilted though upright. The ship operated in the Pacific Ocean during WW II.
Heavy Guns Blast Trenches, 1915
Scientific American - 17 Apr 2015 16:00
Reported in Scientific American, This Week in World War I: April 17, 1915 World War I was an artillery war. In the opening days, the German army used a new variety of siege gun to blast holes in the... --
Climate change may be triggering rain of rocks in French Alps
New Scientist - 17 Apr 2015 15:20
Rockfalls in France's "corridor of death" seem to follow warmer weather - and may become much more frequent as the climate warms
North pole of spinning dwarf planet Ceres glows in the sunlight
New Scientist - 17 Apr 2015 14:30
The first high-resolution images of a dwarf planet have captured the sun-lit north pole of Ceres