Sign In
to Vote &
Create Storyboards.
 

Science News

Location American Science News for 28 October 2015
This Is eSports: Where Pro Gamers Are YouTube Heroes and Entertainment's New Rock Stars As of last year, student athletes in the United States began attending universities on scholarship to play, get this, video games. I did not make this up, and if your...
Read More
1
0
Physicists mimic quantum entanglement with laser pointer to double data speeds In a classic eureka moment, a team of physicists led by The City College of New York and including Herriot-Watt University and Corning Incorporated is showing how beams from ordinary laser pointers mimic quantum entangle...
Read More
0
0
Rising Outdoor CO2 Levels Harming Life Indoors (Op-Ed) Too much CO2 is not so good for our brains, either.
Read More
0
0
Marriage Linked to Better Outcomes After Heart Surgery People who are married may be more likely to survive after heart surgery, a new study finds.
Read More
0
0

Electric Embrace: Eels Curl Up to Supercharge Shocks

Live Science - 28 Oct 2015 20:39
Electric Embrace: Eels Curl Up to Supercharge Shocks Electric eels have a shocking way of demobilizing their dinner.
Read More
0
0

When Eel's Attack, They 'Fart' Lightning | Video

Live Science - 28 Oct 2015 20:36
When Eel's Attack, They 'Fart' Lightning | Video Scientists record sharp voltage increases as feeding electric eels curl their bodies. These electrical discharge immobilize prey by short-circuiting their neuromuscular system, causing extreme muscle fatigue.
Read More
0
0
Sand's Tiny Secrets Unlocked in Dazzling Images (Photos) Peering closely at sand you see far more than the beach.
Read More
0
0
Oh Baby! The Science of Identical Triplets and Quadruplets For two Baltimore parents, their three new bundles of joy may make them feel like one in a million, and statistics show they're not far off: Parents Thomas and Kristen Hewitt welcomed a rare set of identical triplets ear...
Read More
0
0
US company gains FDA approval for selling a test that gives information about your risk of passing on faulty genes, two years after its last test was banned
Read More
0
0
A drug used to treat asthma has reduced inflammation in the brain, increased new brain cells and made old rats perform better in learning and memory tests
Read More
0
0
The last leg of negotiations on a UN climate deal set to be finalised in December has focused on the $100 billion a year needed to fund the changes
Read More
0
0
Potentially catastrophic consequences are expected when record-breaking Patricia makes landfall later today
Read More
0
0
A start-up in Boston will give wearable stress monitors to 1000 doctors and nurses to track the pattern of their moods and how it affects those in their care
Read More
0
0
When all else fails, neutrophil cells can fight infections by releasing nets of their own genetic material, studded with antimicrobial compounds
Read More
0
0
If you thought bees only cared about flowers, think again. Some of them also farm fungus to survive - meaning that fungicides could harm them
Read More
0
0
While global TB incidence is declining, much more work needs to be done to reach new UN targets of ending the epidemic by 2030
Read More
0
0
A start-up is developing autonomous spherical seafaring drones that could scan the seas for everything from missing aircraft to coral reefs
Read More
0
0

60 Seconds

New Scientist - 28 Oct 2015 20:00
New Horizons heads beyond Pluto, how climate change will affect the Hajj, dung shortage hits ecosystems around the world and more
Read More
0
0
Molecular oxygen has been spotted on a comet for the first time, which could help solve a mystery about when the substance first appeared in the solar system
Read More
0
0
The brilliant yellows in four of Vincent van Gogh's paintings are fading, but a map of at-risk areas could help prevent further damage
Read More
0
0
Tremors from 200 kilometres down spread widely, but not as powerfully as deadly shallower quakes in the region. Up to 1000 deaths are still possible though
Read More
0
0

Bumblebees deployed to spray crops with pesticides

New Scientist - 28 Oct 2015 20:00
A Canadian firm is using bees to deliver tiny amounts of pesticides to the flowers of crops, aiming to cut indiscriminate spraying of plants
Read More
0
0

{TITLE}

{PUBLISHER} - {PUBLISHED_DATE}
{TITLE} {CONTENT}
Read More
{VIEWS}
0


Storyboard
Print
{VIEWS}
0
0




Share this Article

Location



Create Storyboard