Science News
3D Mapping the World's Reefs With Sly Lee (Interview)
Singularity Hub - 29 Oct 2015 17:00
Sly Lee: Marine Scientist, Science Communicator, Entrepreneur Graduate Studies Program 2015 Alumni Honolulu, Hawaii and San Francisco, CA If Silicon Valley had a mind of its own, which it may one...
Large Hadron Collider luminosity upgrade project moving to next phase
Phys.org - 29 Oct 2015 22:55
This week more than 230 scientists and engineers from around the world met at CERN to discuss the High-Luminosity LHC - a major upgrade to the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) that will increase the accelerator's discovery po...
In Images: Stunning Flower Fields of the Atacama Desert
Live Science - 29 Oct 2015 21:49
The Atacama Desert, one of the driest places on Earth, has exploded into a riot of color thanks to a rare spring flower bloom.
Allied Navies Destroy Mock Ballistic Missile in Practice Test
Live Science - 29 Oct 2015 20:19
How many navies does it take to shoot down one ballistic missile? Only nine.
In Photos: Newfound Primate Had 'Goggle' Eyes and Tree-Climbing Arms
Live Science - 29 Oct 2015 20:15
Scientists have uncovered the fossils of an 11.6-million-year-old primate that lived in what is now a province of Barcelona, Spain, where it walked on tree branches and ate fruit meals. Here's a look at the newbie and th...
Little Cousin: Human, Ape Ancestor Had 'Goggle Eyes'
Live Science - 29 Oct 2015 20:14
The fossil of a small primate with "goggle" eyes that strode atop tree branches, snagging snacks of fruit, suggests the last common ancestor of all apes might have been less like humans' closest living relatives than oft...
China Ends Its One-Child Policy
Live Science - 29 Oct 2015 20:08
China has officially ended its policy of allowing families to have just one child, and will instead allow parents to have two children.
'Brain Observatories' Could Transform Neuroscience (Live Webcast)
Live Science - 29 Oct 2015 20:06
We know more about the universe than the inner workings the mind, but that's about to change.
What's in a (Martian) Name?
Physics Buzz - 29 Oct 2015 20:04
If you're a fan of The Martian, then you're familiar with the alien landscape of Acidalia Planitia and Arabia Terra. But you may be wondering: Where did these strange names come from? On this week's podcast we set out to...
Bright light may not be dark matter's smoking gun after all
New Scientist - 29 Oct 2015 19:46
Dwarf galaxy observations dash astronomers' hopes that the signal at the centre of the Milky Way was caused by dark matter particles colliding
Salt flats on Europa mean moon's ocean may come to surface
New Scientist - 29 Oct 2015 19:24
Jupiter's icy moon is a favourite of alien-hunters, thanks to its buried ocean. Now it seems the ocean could come to the surface - and it might be life-friendly
Universities Should Rethink Academic Ideals--Joining Industry Supercharges Research and Tech
Singularity Hub - 29 Oct 2015 19:09
The University of Virginia's provost, Tom Katsouleas, once told me that less than one percent, by his estimates, of basic research is commercialized and that there may be as few as...
Researchers find universality in protein locality
Phys.org - 29 Oct 2015 18:44
A team of researchers has mapped out a universal dynamic that explains the production and distribution of proteins in a cell, a process that varies in detail from protein to protein and cell to cell, but that always resu...
Tiny Bird Fossil Solves Big Mystery About Life After Dinosaurs
Live Science - 29 Oct 2015 18:12
A teeny-tiny fossilized bird skeleton is helping researchers understand the explosive rate at which birds diversified after the dinosaur age, new research shows.
Are Movie Theaters About to Disappear? How VR Will Remake Hollywood
Singularity Hub - 29 Oct 2015 18:00
Since the first public movie theater opened in the U.S. in 1905, movies have evolved significantly--sound, color, computer effects, high definition. However, one thing hasn't changed. We still go to...
Frodo's basement: Secret chamber found where hobbit humans lived
New Scientist - 29 Oct 2015 17:55
A new cave has been found at the site where Homo floresiensis hobbits were discovered. It could hold more bones and shed light on the hobbits' origins
Tooth fairy-dust
The Economist - 29 Oct 2015 17:45
A tooth's best friend? TIME was when the preferred material for filling superficial dental cavities was gold. Often, it still is, although cheaper materials are frequently used instead. But, for the deepest sort of filli...
Greater than the sum of its parts
The Economist - 29 Oct 2015 17:45
LIKE some people who might rather not admit it, wolves faced with a scarcity of potential sexual partners are not beneath lowering their standards. It was desperation of this sort, biologists reckon, that led dwindling w...
Stamp collectors
The Economist - 29 Oct 2015 17:45
"IF EVER you wanted to set your watch, now is the time." Leon Lobo, of Britain's National Physical Laboratory (NPL), stands before a rack of servers near Canary Wharf, London's eastern financial outpost. The rack holds a...
Would you take a genetic test that could lay bare your destiny?
New Scientist - 29 Oct 2015 17:20
The decision about whether to take a gene test is at the heart of new play Plaques and Tangles - a dilemma that is becoming ever more common
Newswire: 29 October 2015 - CERN: LHC luminosity upgrade project moving to next phase
Interactions - 29 Oct 2015 17:00
This week more than 230 scientists and engineers from around the world met at CERN1 to discuss the High-Luminosity LHC - a major upgrade to the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) that will increase the accelerator's discovery p...
Fake Blood Made Scientific
Scientific American - 29 Oct 2015 17:00
Slow-flowing physics project from Science Buddies --