Science News
Colorado Mine Spill Aftermath: How to Clean a River
Live Science - 12 Aug 2015 16:48
An accidental breach by an EPA cleanup crew sent 3 million gallons of acidic, heavy-metal-laden water into Colorado's waterways. How do you clean up a river? The answer is twofold: treatment and dilution.
Using an electron to probe the tiny magnetic core of an atom
Phys.org - 12 Aug 2015 15:30
Precise information about the magnetic properties of nuclei is critical for studies of what's known as the 'weak force.' While people do not feel this force in the same way they feel electricity or gravity, its effects a...
World's most powerful laser is 2,000 trillion watts - but what's it for?
Phys.org - 12 Aug 2015 15:00
The most powerful laser beam ever created has been recently fired at Osaka University in Japan, where the Laser for Fast Ignition Experiments (LFEX) has been boosted to produce a beam with a peak power of 2,000 trillion ...
Discovery in growing graphene nanoribbons could enable faster, more efficient electronics
e! Science News - 12 Aug 2015 00:51
Graphene, an atom-thick material with extraordinary properties, is a promising candidate for the next generation of dramatically faster, more energy-efficient electronics. However, scientists have struggled to fabricate ...
King Tut's Tomb May Hide Nefertiti's Secret Grave
Live Science - 12 Aug 2015 23:43
King Tutankhamun's tomb has the faint etchings that may point to a hidden doorway, which one researcher thinks holds the tomb of Nefertiti.
Neighborhood Marijuana Shops Linked to Pot-Related Hospital Stays
Live Science - 12 Aug 2015 23:41
California neighborhoods that have more medical marijuana dispensaries may also have more hospitalizations related to marijuana abuse or addiction, a new study finds.
Beak to Beak: Octopus Has Unusual Sex, Feeding Rituals
Live Science - 12 Aug 2015 22:25
A very unusual octopus has scientists wondering just how well they really know the mysterious eight-armed creatures that inhabit the world's oceans.
Tentacles that think
The Economist - 12 Aug 2015 21:50
ALMOST all intelligent creatures, be they parrots, sharks or human beings, are vertebrates. This is inconvenient for anyone trying to understand the nature of intelligence because it means, by and large, that he can stud...
Quantum computing advance locates neutral atoms
e! Science News - 12 Aug 2015 21:22
For any computer, being able to manipulate information is essential, but for quantum computing, singling out one data location without influencing any of the surrounding locations is difficult. Now, a team of Penn State ...
Mystery Deepens: Matter and Antimatter Are Mirror Images
Live Science - 12 Aug 2015 19:04
Matter and antimatter appear to be perfect mirror images of each other, scientists have discovered with unprecedented levels of precision, foiling hope of solving the mystery as to why there is far matter than antimatter...
Protons and antiprotons appear to be true mirror images
Phys.org - 12 Aug 2015 19:00
In a stringent test of a fundamental property of the standard model of particle physics, known as CPT symmetry, researchers from the RIKEN-led BASE collaboration at CERN have made the most precise measurements so far of ...
Hornless cattle will herald a gene-editing revolution on farms
New Scientist - 12 Aug 2015 19:00
Gene editing has created cattle that do not need painful horn removal. The same technique can spare other new breeds from suffering or culling
Kepler sees hints of asteroids pursuing planets near other stars
New Scientist - 12 Aug 2015 19:00
Asteroids called Trojans sit in gravitational wells around planets in our solar system - now data from the Kepler spacecraft suggests it happens elsewhere too
Birds' love of cigarette butts in nests has two sides for chicks
New Scientist - 12 Aug 2015 19:00
Some city birds like lining their nests with cigarette stubs, cutting parasite numbers but also damaging chicks' DNA
Iron-age Britons engaged in mysterious pig trotter festivals
New Scientist - 12 Aug 2015 19:00
The discovery of thousands of bones at a site near Cardiff suggests massive bring-your-own-pig festivals helped Britons deal with the collapse of Bronze Age
Japan reboots nuclear power despite protests and no waste plan
New Scientist - 12 Aug 2015 19:00
By Friday, Japan's residents are expected to start getting first nuclear power since the shutdown of 48 reactors that followed the Fukushima disaster
The bird that flies 16,000 km across the Pacific for no reason
New Scientist - 12 Aug 2015 19:00
A puffin relative is the only bird to migrate 8000 km between western Canada and Japan, then fly back - but what for? Conditions are the same at both ends
Why Scotland will use new EU rule to ban the growing of GM crops
New Scientist - 12 Aug 2015 19:00
The Scottish government plans to prohibit the growing of genetically modified crops, making use of recent EU rules on opting out
Early pregnancy test may predict miscarriage and chance of twins
New Scientist - 12 Aug 2015 19:00
A urine test may reveal how likely a pregnant woman is to have a successful pregnancy and give birth to a healthy child
Darting eyes in REM sleep are seeing objects in your dreams
New Scientist - 12 Aug 2015 19:00
When your eyes move during sleep, are they "seeing" anything? Research suggests these movements could be looking at objects in our mind's eye
Fish oil pills may help teenagers stave off schizophrenia
New Scientist - 12 Aug 2015 19:00
Young people with early signs of schizophrenia may benefit from taking fish oils, which were found to reduce the risk of psychosis developing by 75 per cent
Trans fats, not saturated fat, linked to heart disease risk
New Scientist - 12 Aug 2015 19:00
Evidence is mounting that trans fats, found in margarine and processed foods, raise the risk of contracting, and dying from, heart disease