Sign In
to Vote &
Create Storyboards.
 

Science News

Location American Science News for 12 November 2015

Mysterious 'Blood Rain' Tints Water a Gruesome Hue

Live Science - 12 Nov 2015 23:15
Mysterious 'Blood Rain' Tints Water a Gruesome Hue In several small villages in the northwest of Spain, no one knew what made the water in their fountains turn a blood-like red.
Read More
0
0
New research extends classic quantum optics phenomenon Physicists at the University of Southampton have extended the theory of resonance fluorescence, a classic phenomenon in quantum optics, to 2D nanostructures that have novel light emission properties.
Read More
0
0
Incan Child Sacrified to the Gods Reveals History of American Expansion The genetics of an Incan child who was sacrificed about 500 years ago reveals details of the Native American expansion into the Americas.
Read More
0
0

8-Hour Sleepers More Likely to Be Heart Healthy

Live Science - 12 Nov 2015 21:50
8-Hour Sleepers More Likely to Be Heart Healthy People who get enough sleep are more likely to hit other heart health targets, too.
Read More
0
0

Superconductor survives ultra-high magnetic field

e! Science News - 12 Nov 2015 21:39
Physicists from the universities of Groningen and Nijmegen (the Netherlands) and Hong Kong have discovered that transistors made of ultrathin layers molybdeendisulfide (MoS2) are not only superconducting at low temperatu...
Read More
0
0
Firefighters Face Highest Heart Attack Risk Among Responders Compared to other emergency responders, firefighters are more at risk for heart disease.
Read More
0
0
Physicists from the universities of Groningen and Nijmegen (the Netherlands) and Hong Kong have discovered that transistors made of ultrathin layers molybdeendisulfide (MoS2) are not only superconducting at low temperatu...
Read More
0
0
Miniaturizable magnetic resonance: Microscopic gem key to new development in magnetic lab-on-a-chip technology A garnet crystal only one micrometre in diameter was instrumental in a University of Alberta team of physicists creating a route to "lab-on-a-chip" technology for magnetic resonance, a tool to simplify advanced magnetic ...
Read More
0
0
Earth's Oldest Water May Have Come from Ancient H2O-Filled Dust A new study delivers the first evidence that water in ancient dust grains collected at the heart of an infant Earth during its formative years.
Read More
0
0
Rather than arriving by meteorite, Earth's water seems to originate in the very dust that formed our planet - the same could be true of other worlds
Read More
0
0
Exponential Medicine: What to Expect When You're Expecting Designer Babies Anywhere you look in the modern world, you'll see humans translating science fiction into science fact. We make predictions about a far off future, and then our curiosity drives us...
Read More
0
0
Earth's Absorption of CO2 May Tilt In Wrong Direction | Video For at least the past 50 years, about half of all Earth's carbon dioxide emissions - human and natural - have been absorbed by the land and oceans. Scientists are trying to understand how much more CO2 this global carbon...
Read More
0
0
Rural Biomass Burning vs. Megacity Industry: Who Emits More CO2 | 5-Day Time-Lapse Video Scientists are studying the heat trapping behavior of CO2 released by land-clearing and accidental forest fires vs. factories in large urban centers. The data producing this simulation were taken during a 5-day period in...
Read More
0
0
Gaia's Garden - One Year of Earth's Plant Growth | Time-Lapse Video Plant growth and decay on land and ocean over a 12-moth cycle can be seen in this 'average year' data set, compiled from many science imaging satellites
Read More
0
0
NIST team proves 'spooky action at a distance' is really real Einstein was wrong about at least one thing: There are, in fact, "spooky actions at a distance," as now proven by researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST).
Read More
0
0

Ultrathin Graphene Can Improve Night Vision Tech

Live Science - 12 Nov 2015 18:58
Ultrathin Graphene Can Improve Night Vision Tech Night-vision windshields on cars might one day be possible with advanced thermal imaging technology based on flexible, transparent, atomically thin sheets of carbon, researchers say.
Read More
0
0
Other fish leap out of the water, but only the needlefish is cunning enough to use this acrobatic feat to make itself invisible to the schools of fish it hunts
Read More
0
0

Build a Paper Rocket

Scientific American - 12 Nov 2015 18:00
Build a Paper Rocket Learn about the physics of flight with this soaring science activity --
Read More
0
0

Wayward Satellites Repurposed to Test General Relativity

Scientific American - 12 Nov 2015 18:00
Wayward Satellites Repurposed to Test General Relativity Scientists will use wonky orbit to test Einstein’s theories --
Read More
0
0

The observer corps

The Economist - 12 Nov 2015 17:59
The observer corps IF YOU want to build an atom bomb, land men on the Moon or work out the exact order of the 3 billion chemical "letters" in the DNA of the human genome, then Big Science, a large-scale project backed by a budget in the bi...
Read More
0
0

Knockout jab

The Economist - 12 Nov 2015 17:59
Knockout jab FEW vaccines have been so successful, so quickly, as MenAfriVac. It was introduced into Africa in 2010, to immunise people against meningitis A--a bacterial infection of the membranes surrounding the brain and the spinal...
Read More
0
0

Compare and contrast

The Economist - 12 Nov 2015 17:59
Compare and contrast WHEN a big earthquake strikes, it does not do equal harm everywhere. Places resting on unstable sediment will shift around a lot and are thus likely to be damaged badly. Those resting on bedrock are normally better off--...
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