Science News
Vaccines May Protect Kids Against Strokes, Too
Live Science - 30 Sep 2015 23:23
Scientists have found yet another reason to vaccinate their children: Keeping up with immunizations may reduce the risk of childhood stroke, according to a new study.
Q&A with Fermilab's first artist-in-residence
Symmetry Magazine - 30 Sep 2015 22:53
Symmetry sits down with Lindsay Olson as she wraps up a year of creating art inspired by particle physics. S: How did you end up at Fermilab? LO: In March 2014 I had an exhibition of my work at North Park College....
Blast from the Past: 3 Civil War Cannons Pulled from River
Live Science - 30 Sep 2015 22:41
They might look like rusty old guns, but these 150-year-old cannons offer locals an important connection with their history.
This Soft Matter 3D Printer Builds Intricate Structures in Self-Healing Gel
Singularity Hub - 30 Sep 2015 20:53
You can print wild designs using a 3D printer--shapes you couldn't make any other way. But 3D printing is also still in thrall to the laws of physics. To date, 3D...
Musicians' brains fire symmetrically when they listen to music
New Scientist - 30 Sep 2015 20:00
Proficiency with a musical instrument doesn't just change the structure of the brain - it also changes the way we hear music
60 Seconds
New Scientist - 30 Sep 2015 19:00
Crocs hybridising, grisly walrus deaths, quantum computing deal and more
Paralysed man uses mind control to walk again
New Scientist - 30 Sep 2015 19:00
A device that monitors brain signals was hooked up to muscle-activating electrodes in the man's legs, enabling him to control his movement just by thinking about it
Deepest earthquakes seem to be seasonal but we don't know why
New Scientist - 30 Sep 2015 19:00
Large magnitude, deep earthquakes occur more often between April and October - but the jury is still out on whether this is just down to chance
Genes protecting smokers' health one of many UK Biobank findings
New Scientist - 30 Sep 2015 19:00
Those with a long smoking habit and good health might have their genes to thank - one of many findings emerging from a vast genetic resource
Rosettawatch: Onion layers prove 67P is a slow-mo comet mash-up
New Scientist - 30 Sep 2015 19:00
A geological survey of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko has revealed its two halves have layers that don't line up, meaning they came together at a crawl
How did Volkswagen cheat in tests and can it fix affected cars?
New Scientist - 30 Sep 2015 19:00
VW has been cheating in emissions tests to make its diesel cars appear less polluting than they really are - we look at the options the company now faces
DNA-cutting enzymes could slice through gene editing patent spat
New Scientist - 30 Sep 2015 19:00
The most significant biotechnology breakthrough in recent years, a technology called CRISPR, has sparked a patent battle: novel research suggests a workaround
Plastic in the food chain: Artificial debris found in fish
New Scientist - 30 Sep 2015 19:00
Textile fibres and plastic have been found in the guts of fish caught off the coasts of California and Indonesia, raising concerns over food safety
Activist bots recruit humans to their cause on Twitter
New Scientist - 30 Sep 2015 19:00
Protest movements could get a tech boost. Software can now comb social media to spread an activist group's messages - even targeting the most receptive people
VW emissions fraud tallies with Europe's pollution overshoots
New Scientist - 30 Sep 2015 19:00
Nitrogen oxide pollution has been inexplicably high for years in Germany, France and other European states
Salty water seen flowing on Mars, not far from Curiosity rover
New Scientist - 30 Sep 2015 19:00
NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter finds strongest evidence yet that there is liquid water on the surface fo the Red Planet, so there might also be life
Invasive herb could hamper East Africa's fight against malaria
New Scientist - 30 Sep 2015 19:00
Gains made in the fight against malaria in East Africa could be set back by an invasive plant species
Earthquake artificial intelligence knows where damage is worst
New Scientist - 30 Sep 2015 19:00
Algorithms can use seismic data and structural knowledge of buildings to judge which parts of a city will be most at risk and prioritise rescue efforts
Ears of early humans could hear frequencies used in speech
New Scientist - 30 Sep 2015 19:00
Bones from two human ancestors living between 1 and 3 million years ago show their hearing shifted towards frequencies useful for savannah survival and speech
Crowds beat computers in answer to Wikipedia-sized maths problem
New Scientist - 30 Sep 2015 19:00
A maths problem previously tackled with the help of a computer, which produced a proof the size of Wikipedia, has now been cut down to size by a human
Surgical device repairs damaged still-beating heart with glue
New Scientist - 30 Sep 2015 19:00
A light-activated adhesive has been used to repair a hole in the heart of a living pig through a keyhole incision
Multiverses-in-a-box let us simulate the cosmos before we see it
New Scientist - 30 Sep 2015 19:00
As supercomputers improve, astronomers are starting to simulate what telescopes will see before they're even built