Science News
Research findings point way to designing crack-resistant metals
Phys.org - 24 Jun 2015 23:21
Potential solutions to big problems continue to arise from research that is revealing how materials behave at the smallest scales.
Using lasers to see the shape of molecules
Phys.org - 24 Jun 2015 14:10
A scientist in a crisp, white lab coat and protective eye goggles sits behind a safety shield, controller in hand. In front of him is a powerful titanium-sapphire laser, aimed at a crystal lens. His thumb gently squeezes...
Exceptional view of deep Arctic Ocean methane seeps
EurekAlert! - 24 Jun 2015 06:00
(CAGE - Center for Arctic Gas Hydrate, Climate and Environment) Close to 30.000 high definition images of the deep Arctic Ocean floor were captured on a recent research cruise. They give an exclusive insight into the mos...
When Science and Entertainment Work Together
Physics Buzz - 24 Jun 2015 21:20
"We're here to inspire filmmakers," says Rick Loverd, Program Manager of the Science and Entertainment Exchange, a program of the National Academy of Sciences. "We're here to provide mainstream media content creators wit...
Get ready for the leap second - it could be the last one ever
New Scientist - 24 Jun 2015 21:00
On Tuesday night the clocks will stand still at 23:59:60 to keep our time in sync with the universe. But does our high-speed world demand a new solution? (full text available to subscribers)
Mouse Senses Magnetic Fields Possibly via Quantum Processes
Scientific American - 24 Jun 2015 20:36
Some organisms’ internal compasses relay direction via magnetic iron crystals, but in wood mice and birds, a totally different compass seems to rely on quantum processes --
Zombie Burials? Ancient Greeks Restrained the Undead
Live Science - 24 Jun 2015 20:20
Ancient supernatural practices may explain why two Grecian graves contain skeletons that are pinned down with heavy objects and rocks, almost as though people wanted to trap the bodies underground, a new article finds.
Photos: Ancient Greek Burials Reveal Fear of the Dead
Live Science - 24 Jun 2015 20:20
The ancient Greeks sometimes placed heavy objects, such as rocks and ceramic vessels, on the bodies of people they feared to be revenants, or the living dead.
'Yeti' Crab Grows Its Own Food, Lives in Antarctic Spa
Live Science - 24 Jun 2015 20:13
What's white and blind and hairy all over? A yeti, of course! Or rather, a yeti crab.
Ancient, Shell-Less Turtle Sported Whiplike Tail
Live Science - 24 Jun 2015 20:06
An ancestor of modern-day turtles, a shell-less creature with a long tail once puttered around an ancient lake, likely munching on insects and worms with its peglike teeth, a new study finds.
Antarctic Yeti crabs cling to hot jets and farm bacteria
New Scientist - 24 Jun 2015 20:00
Crowds of blind, hairy crabs huddle together around life-giving vents and seem to cultivate bacteria on their coats in the icy depths of the Southern Ocean
Glowing world of rainbow corals found in the Red Sea
New Scientist - 24 Jun 2015 20:00
Corals that switch from green to deep red when exposed to ultraviolet light could provide a new toolkit for biomedical imaging
500-Million-Year-Old 'Smiling' Worm Rears Its Head
Live Science - 24 Jun 2015 19:14
Scientists have finally seen the face of the ancient worm Hallucigenia, which leaves fossils so bizarre researchers once thought its top was its bottom and its back was its front. And it's a doozy, with a circular tooth-...
Blood test for pancreatic cancer could catch disease in time
New Scientist - 24 Jun 2015 19:00
The concentration of a protein in the blood could allow doctors to screen people for a cancer that has one of the worst survival rates
Weird fossil worm with legs and spikes finally reveals its head
New Scientist - 24 Jun 2015 19:00
First we had Hallucigenia the wrong way up. And what some people thought was the head was actually squashed guts. Now we can finally look it in the eye
Construction resumes on Hawaii's Thirty Meter Telescope
New Scientist - 24 Jun 2015 18:30
After a two-month pause and potential game over, construction on the biggest telescope on Mauna Kea will resume - but protests continue
Spintronics advance brings wafer-scale quantum devices closer to reality
Phys.org - 24 Jun 2015 18:29
An electronics technology that uses the "spin" - or magnetization - of atomic nuclei to store and process information promises huge gains in performance over today's electron-based devices. But getting there is proving c...
Seeing in gamma rays
Symmetry Magazine - 24 Jun 2015 18:13
The latest sky maps produced by Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope combine seven years of observations. Maps from the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope literally show the universe in a different light. Today Fermi’s Large A...
Some Indoor Tanning Locations May Attract 'High-Risk' Tanners
Live Science - 24 Jun 2015 17:32
People who go tanning at gyms or beauty shops may have riskier tanning habits than those who go to tanning salons, new research finds.
The World's Happiest Countries (The List)
Live Science - 24 Jun 2015 16:56
A new report used interviews with more than 146,000 people around the world to rank 145 countries by the well being of their residents.
Jellyfish "Gooeyness" Could Be a Model for Self-Healing Robots
Scientific American - 24 Jun 2015 16:50
A jellyfish’s strange shortcut to symmetry allows injured animals to reorganize their remaining limbs instead of having to regrow them --
Exclusive: Astronomers Discover the Most Jupiter-Like Exoplanet Ever Seen
Scientific American - 24 Jun 2015 16:48
Alien world may help explain how gas giants form and shape their planetary systems --