Science News
Why Beachgoers Let Sexual Assault Happen Right Before Their Eyes
Live Science - 21 Apr 2015 23:43
A recent video of a sexual assault -- on a crowded Florida beach, in broad daylight -- raises a question: Why didn't one of the hundreds of bystanders step in to help the victim?
Earth Day: Facts & History
Live Science - 21 Apr 2015 23:24
Earth Day is an annual event, observed on April 22, that celebrates the planet's environment and raises public awareness about pollution.
Human Carbon Dioxide Thins Polar Ice, NASA Finds | Video
Live Science - 21 Apr 2015 22:09
Human activities greatly outstrip volcanoes as the world's leading carbon dioxide producers, raising sea levels, drying forests and altering animal habitat. Watch 'Secrets of the Universe' on Hulu. ://.hulu.com/secrets-o...
Printing silicon on paper, with lasers
e! Science News - 21 Apr 2015 21:13
In seeking to develop the next generation of micro-electronic transistors, researchers have long sought to find the next best thing to replace silicon. To this end, a wealth of recent research into fully flexible electro...
What Babies Eat May Affect Leukemia Risk
Live Science - 21 Apr 2015 21:04
Infants who start eating solid foods later than usual may be at increased risk for a type of blood cancer, a new study suggests.
New tabletop detector 'sees' single electrons
e! Science News - 21 Apr 2015 20:41
MIT physicists have developed a new tabletop particle detector that is able to identify single electrons in a radioactive gas.
Explore Loch Ness Monster's Home on Google Street View
Live Science - 21 Apr 2015 19:57
Looking for the Loch Ness monster just got easier, thanks to Google Street View.
Kermit the Frog Look-Alike Discovered in Costa Rica
Live Science - 21 Apr 2015 19:57
The inch-long species, scientifically named Hyalinobatrachium dianae, joins Costa Rica's 13 other glass frogs.
E-cigarettes are smoke of choice for US schoolchildren
New Scientist - 21 Apr 2015 19:32
US high schoolers are opting for e-cigarettes over conventional cigarettes. Good news? Or have we just shifted the problem?
Whiteboards of the future: New electronic paper could make inexpensive electronic displays
e! Science News - 21 Apr 2015 18:35
Researchers from the University of Tokyo have revamped an old e-paper concept to make an inexpensive handwriting-enabled e-paper well suited to large displays like whiteboards. They describe the e-paper in the Journal of...
TomTom Multi-Sport Cardio: GPS Watch Review
Live Science - 21 Apr 2015 18:21
The TomTom Multi-Sport Cardio is an affordable GPS watch, but it's missing some of the features you'll find on more expensive multisport watches.
Printing silicon on paper, with lasers
Phys.org - 21 Apr 2015 18:21
In seeking to develop the next generation of micro-electronic transistors, researchers have long sought to find the next best thing to replace silicon. To this end, a wealth of recent research into fully flexible electro...
New electronic paper could make inexpensive electronic displays
Phys.org - 21 Apr 2015 18:20
Researchers from the University of Tokyo have revamped an old e-paper concept to make an inexpensive handwriting-enabled e-paper well suited to large displays like whiteboards. They describe the e-paper in the Journal of...
Stars throw out a lifetime's waste carbon in just 1000 years
New Scientist - 21 Apr 2015 18:00
A star has been seen spewing carbon from its core into space, where it might form organic molecules useful for life, but the speed of the expulsion was a surprise
Measles Vaccine Not Linked with Autism, Even in High-Risk Kids
Live Science - 21 Apr 2015 17:52
A new study of children at high risk of developing autism is the latest research to find no link between autism and the vaccine against measles, mumps and rubella (called the MMR vaccine).
About time: New record for atomic clock accuracy
Phys.org - 21 Apr 2015 17:20
In another advance at the far frontiers of timekeeping by National Institute of Standards and Technology researchers, the latest modification of a record-setting strontium atomic clock has achieved precision and stabilit...
Atomic Clock Is So Precise It Won't Lose a Second for 15 Billion Years
Live Science - 21 Apr 2015 17:01
The most precise clock ever made could hold time accurately for the entire age of the universe.
The Internet of Everything Is a Simply Massive Opportunity: $19 Trillion in the Next Decade
Singularity Hub - 21 Apr 2015 17:00
This week I interviewed Padma Warrior, CTO and Chief Strategist of Cisco, to discuss the Internet of Everything (IoE). Padma is a brilliant and visionary person, one of the most important...
Mu2e breaks ground on experiment
Symmetry Magazine - 21 Apr 2015 16:18
Scientists seek rare muon conversion that could signal new physics. This weekend, members of the Mu2e collaboration dug their shovels into the ground of Fermilab's Muon Campus for the experiment that will search for the ...
Giant magnetic effects induced in hybrid materials
Phys.org - 21 Apr 2015 15:40
Proximity effects in hybrid heterostructures, which contain distinct layers of different materials, allow one material species to reveal and/or control properties of a dissimilar species. Specifically, for a magnetic thi...
Why do measurements of the gravitational constant vary so much?
Phys.org - 21 Apr 2015 15:30
(Phys.org)--Newton's gravitational constant, G, has been measured about a dozen times over the last 40 years, but the results have varied by much more than would be expected due to random and systematic errors. Now scien...
Nanophotonics with ultracold atoms for simulating quantum many-body systems
Phys.org - 21 Apr 2015 15:20
Ultracold atoms in the so-called optical lattices, which are generated by crosswise superposition of laser beams, have been proven to be one of the most promising tools for simulating and understanding the behaviour of m...