Science News
Experiment suggests it might be possible to control atoms entangled with the light they emit by manipulating detection
Phys.org - 12 May 2016 21:42
Flick a switch on a dark winter day and your office is flooded with bright light, one of many everyday miracles to which we are all usually oblivious.
The Personal Factory Is Here--and It Will Bring a Wild New Era of Invention
Singularity Hub - 12 May 2016 21:00
The software startup launching out of a garage or a dorm room is now the stuff of legend. We can all name the stories of people who got together in a garage with a few computers and ended up disrupting massive, establish...
HIV testing during early infection may reduce new cases in high-risk communities
Science Daily - 12 May 2016 16:45
Detecting HIV earlier, through screening programs that can identify the virus shortly after infection, may lead to lower rates of HIV transmission in local epidemics, suggest findings from a new study. After an acute inf...
Hints of unknown elementary particle explained using Swedish theory
Phys.org - 12 May 2016 16:29
Particle physicists around the world are currently on the edge of their seats awaiting information about the traces of a brand new particle that were found during the latest run of the Large Hadron Collider particle acce...
Mommy, Daddy, where does mass come from?
Symmetry Magazine - 12 May 2016 17:39
The Higgs field gives mass to elementary particles, but most of our mass comes from somewhere else. The story of particle mass starts right after the big bang. During the very first moments of the universe, almost all pa...
Relativity of rotational motion confirmed
Phys.org - 12 May 2016 16:22
It has been one hundred years since the publication of Einstein's general theory of relativity in May 1916. In a paper recently published in EPJ Plus, Norwegian physicist Øyvind Grøn from the Oslo and Akershus Universi...
Earlier ice melt in the Arctic cuts survival of birds in Africa
New Scientist - 12 May 2016 21:00
Red knots are one of many animals shrinking in the face of climate change. This downsizing affects their feeding ability and means fewer survive
Building blocks of life's first self-replicator recreated in lab
New Scientist - 12 May 2016 21:00
RNA molecules are thought to be some of the earliest self-replicators that led to life. Now their building blocks have been made to self-assemble in a lab
13 Numbers That Rival the Number 13
Live Science - 12 May 2016 19:35
Here are 13 other numbers that people have fixated on as lucky, unlucky or just plain evil.
Crafting complex materials to solve the mystery of magnetism
Phys.org - 12 May 2016 14:39
In the quest to synthesize a useful material not found in nature, a scientific team developed a multidimensional analysis approach, leading to the first direct measurement of ordering in the material at the atomic scale....
Researchers demonstrate attosecond temporal resolution in combination with atomic selectivity
Phys.org - 12 May 2016 13:51
Attosecond light pulses in the extreme ultraviolet have drawn a great deal of attention due to their ability to interrogate electronic dynamics in real time. Nevertheless, to follow charge dynamics and excitations in mat...
Everything There Is
Scientific American - 12 May 2016 05:28Hunt for Big Bang Gravitational Waves Gets $40-Million Boost
Scientific American - 13 May 2016 01:35
The nonprofit Simons Foundation will fund a new observatory to search for signs of stretching in the very early universe --
Post-conflict reconciliation led to societal healing, but worsened psychological health
Science Daily - 13 May 2016 00:10
Reconciliation programs promote societal healing, but that these gains come at the cost of reduced psychological health, worsening depression, anxiety, and trauma.
Diabetes drug found no better than placebo at treating nonalcoholic fatty liver disease
Science Daily - 13 May 2016 00:06
A diabetes medication described in some studies as an effective treatment for nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) works no better than a placebo, report researchers after conducting the first randomized, double-blin...
Rare human disease found in dogs
Science Daily - 13 May 2016 00:06
A rare, severe form of pulmonary hypertension, which up until now, has only been classified as a human lung disease, has also been discovered in dogs according to an American study.
Ingestible robot operates in simulated stomach
Science Daily - 13 May 2016 00:06
In experiments involving a simulation of the human esophagus and stomach, researchers have demonstrated a tiny origami robot that can unfold itself from a swallowed capsule and, steered by external magnetic fields, crawl...
How light is detected affects the atom that emits it
e! Science News - 12 May 2016 23:14
Flick a switch on a dark winter day and your office is flooded with bright light, one of many everyday miracles to which we are all usually oblivious.
Gene regulatory mutation linked to rare childhood cancer
Science Daily - 12 May 2016 22:54
A single defect in a gene that codes for a histone -- a 'spool' that wraps idle DNA -- is linked to pediatric cancers, a new study indicates. Histones derive their pattern from the same genome that they help to pack up a...
Database helps researchers connect exposures to health effects, compare diseases
Science Daily - 12 May 2016 22:54
Two new studies give researchers new strategies for connecting environmental exposures to human health effects. To determine whether a drug can be used to treat more than one disease, scientists look for overlaps between...
Team discovers new HIV vaccine target
Science Daily - 12 May 2016 22:53
A team of scientists has reported a research trifecta. They discovered a new vulnerable site on HIV for a vaccine to target, a broadly neutralizing antibody that binds to that target site, and how the antibody stops the ...
Fatal attachment: How pathogenic bacteria hang on to mucosa and avoid exfoliation
Science Daily - 12 May 2016 22:53
Mucous surfaces in the nose, throat, lungs, intestine, and genital tract are points of first contact for many pathogens. As a defensive strategy, most animals (and humans) can rapidly exfoliate these surfaces (i.e., shed...