Science News
Using Technology to Create Safe and Ethical Retail Supply Chains
Singularity Hub - 9 Jan 2016 22:00
On April 24, 2013, Rana Plaza, an eight-story commercial building on the outskirts of Dhaka, Bangladesh, collapsed, killing 1,129 garment workers. The world watched in horror as thousands were pulled...
Cosmology Is in Crisis -- But Not for the Reason You May Think
Singularity Hub - 9 Jan 2016 20:00
Science is advancing rapidly. We are eradicating diseases, venturing further into space and discovering a growing zoo of subatomic particles. But cosmology -- which is trying to understand the evolution of...
This Week's Awesome Stories from Around the Web (Through Jan 9)
Singularity Hub - 9 Jan 2016 19:36
ROBOTICS: When Should a Robot Say No to Its Human Owner? Adam Elkus | Slate "Telling a robot to only obey wise choices from a human owner merely shifts the question to defining...
Optimum band gap for hybrid silicon/perovskite tandem solar cell
e! Science News - 9 Jan 2016 19:10
Tandem solar cells based on silicon and perovskites have raised high hopes for future high efficiency solar modules. A tandem solar cell works by absorbing the high energy photons (visible light) in a top cell which gene...
Electronically connected graphene nanoribbons foresee high-speed electronics
e! Science News - 9 Jan 2016 19:10
An international research team at Tohoku University's Advanced Institute of Materials Research (AIMR) succeeded in chemically interconnecting chiral-edge graphene nanoribbons (GNRs) with zigzag-edge features by molecular...
Pocket-Sized Device Charges Your Phone with Water
Live Science - 9 Jan 2016 18:41
A new portable fuel cell charger can charge a smartphone or tablet by combining saltwater and oxygen, say while you're basking in the sun on the beach.
Taskmaster robots watch while you work in case you miss a step
New Scientist - 9 Jan 2016 15:00
Humans are still better workers than robots, but we are more forgetful. Here to help is a robot that keeps an eye on your every move and prompts you when you slip up
Anaconda Facts
Live Science - 9 Jan 2016 06:54
Anacondas are found in tropical South America. They are among the largest snakes in the world and are known for their swimming ability.
What's Behind Brazil's Alarming Surge in Babies Born with Small Heads
Live Science - 9 Jan 2016 06:06
Zika typically causes flulike aches and rash, but the rapidly spreading disease is fueling global worries about tiny-headed infants and brain damage.
Humans Leave a Telltale Residue on Earth
Live Science - 9 Jan 2016 05:48
Scientists find a layer of plastics, radiation and soot embedded in the planet's surface, defining a new Anthropocene epoch
Stir no more: Scientists show that draining speeds up bioassays
Science Daily - 9 Jan 2016 05:09
Three scientists have proposed a way to speed up common bioassays. Their solution, reminiscent of the magic behind washing machines, could reduce wait times to a fraction of what they once were. Biological assays that on...
Xistential crisis: Discovery shows there's more to the story in silencing X chromosomes
Science Daily - 9 Jan 2016 05:09
Nearly every girl and woman on Earth carries two X chromosomes in nearly every one of her cells -- but one of them does (mostly) nothing. That's because it's been silenced, keeping most of its DNA locked up and unread li...
Key driver for treatment of deadly brain cancer
Science Daily - 9 Jan 2016 05:09
A factor in how malignant tumors spread may also be a key to treatment.
Physicists offer theories to explain mysterious collision at Large Hadron Collider
Phys.org - 9 Jan 2016 02:52
Physicists around the world were puzzled recently when an unusual bump appeared in the signal of the Large Hadron Collider, the world's largest and most powerful particle accelerator, causing them to wonder if it was a n...
Novel metasurface revolutionizes ubiquitous scientific tool
e! Science News - 9 Jan 2016 02:33
What do astrophysics, telecommunications and pharmacology have in common? Each of these fields relies on polarimeters -- instruments that detect the direction of the oscillation of electromagnetic waves, otherwise known ...