Science News
Gene Editing Is Now Cheap and Easy--and No One Is Prepared for the Consequences
Singularity Hub - 8 Sep 2015 21:00
In April 2015, a paper by Chinese scientists about their attempts to edit the DNA of a human embryo rocked the scientific world and set off a furious debate. Leading...
Photonics to revolutionise internet speeds
Phys.org - 8 Sep 2015 14:22
While people may have never heard of photonics before, they will surely have heard about the technology that relies on its existence, namely the internet, computers and smartphones.
Newswire: 8 Sep 2015 - Kavli IPMU: Latest results from dark matter detector XMASS presented in Torino
Interactions - 8 Sep 2015 23:00
An experiment to test whether dark matter signals change throughout the year has found contradicting results to a previous experiment, announced an international team of researchers at the TAUP2015 conference in Italy th...
It's After Labor Day, So Why Is It Still So Hot?
Live Science - 8 Sep 2015 22:23
Unseasonable heat has much of the U.S. in its grip. Global warming will likely make heat waves more intense.
Untangling the mechanics of knots
e! Science News - 8 Sep 2015 22:21
Got rope? Then try this experiment: Cross both ends, left over right, then bring the left end under and out, as if tying a pair of shoelaces. If you repeat this sequence, you get what's called a "granny" knot. If, instea...
'Super-Henge' Revealed: A New English Mystery Is Uncovered
Live Science - 8 Sep 2015 22:19
A new finding suggests that Stonehenge did not stand alone.
Space-Borne Astronaut Runs Robot On Earth | Video
Live Science - 8 Sep 2015 22:18
On Sept. 7th, 2015, European astronaut Andreas Mogensen - orbiting 240+ miles up and flying at 17,000+ mph - placed a peg in a hole on Earth; a demonstration of teleoperation using a force-feedback controlled machine sys...
Half of American Adults Have Diabetes or Prediabetes
Live Science - 8 Sep 2015 20:45
In 2011 to 2012, more than 12 percent of U.S. adults had diabetes, and 38 percent had prediabetes, a new study finds.
New detectors allow search for lightweight dark matter particles
Phys.org - 8 Sep 2015 19:53
The Earth, planets, stars, and galaxies form only the visible portion of the matter in the universe. Greater by far is the share accounted for by invisible "dark matter". Scientists have searched for the particles of dar...
Early Humans Climbed Down from Trees Gradually
Live Science - 8 Sep 2015 18:49
The last common ancestor of humans and chimpanzees may have had shoulders that were similar to those of modern African apes, researchers say. The finding supports the notion that the human lineage shifted to a life away ...
Armchair fossil hunters use drone photos to find ancient bones
New Scientist - 8 Sep 2015 18:38
A citizen science project is seeking volunteers to scour photos of Kenyan rocks in a bid to reconstruct past landscapes and environments
Cryptographers Brace for Quantum Revolution
Scientific American - 8 Sep 2015 18:15
Encryption fix begins in preparation for arrival of futuristic computers --
Smart Thermometers Could Help Contain Epidemics, Experts Say
Live Science - 8 Sep 2015 17:12
Smart thermometers that allow users to see their temperature readings on a smartphone may also help researchers identify and predict infectious- disease outbreaks, some experts say.
Tests on kangaroo shoulder joints reveal how shoulder and knee cartilage behaves differently
Phys.org - 8 Sep 2015 17:00
If you have survived years of pushing, pulling, lifting, lowering and rotational forces assaulting your shoulders, thank your healthy articular cartilage. It is the smooth, white, lubricating connective tissue covering t...
New tool can nondestructively characterize structural materials in unprecedented detail as they deform
Phys.org - 8 Sep 2015 17:00
Materials scientists are busy developing advanced materials, while also working to squeeze every bit of performance out of existing materials. This is particularly true in the aerospace industry, where small advantages i...
Researchers combine diamond and cubic boron nitride with a novel alloying process for a superhard material
Phys.org - 8 Sep 2015 17:00
Diamonds are forever, except when they oxidize while cutting through iron, cobalt, nickel, chromium, or vanadium at high temperatures. Conversely, cubic boron nitride possesses superior chemical inertness but only about ...
Cancer trap grabs wandering tumour cells to warn of early spread
New Scientist - 8 Sep 2015 17:00
An implant under the skin could provide an early warning of cancer spreading through the body before a person knows they are ill
Male Seahorses Act Like Pregnant Mammals, Study Suggests
Live Science - 8 Sep 2015 16:33
Pregnant male seahorses tend to develop embryos similarly to the way mammals do, new research shows.
Researchers in Basel develop ideal single-photon source
e! Science News - 8 Sep 2015 16:21
With the help of a semiconductor quantum dot, physicists at the University of Basel have developed a new type of light source that emits single photons. For the first time, the researchers have managed to create a stream...
Researchers create super-stretchable metallic conductors for flexible electronics
Phys.org - 8 Sep 2015 15:32
Washington State University researchers have discovered how to stretch metal films used in flexible electronics to twice their size without breaking.
The 'blue bastard' kissing fish from seafarers' tales is real
New Scientist - 8 Sep 2015 15:26
An elusive fish from Australia has finally been documented by science. Being tricky to catch earned it the rude nickname, which even caught on in Latin
Researchers create computer model that simulates anesthesia's impact on brain
Phys.org - 8 Sep 2015 15:12
(Phys.org)--A team of researchers working at the University of Pittsburgh has created a computer model that simulates in some interesting ways, the process that occurs when anesthesia causes the human brain to essentiall...