Science News
Is Elon Musk right, are we really living in a simulated cosmos?
New Scientist - 3 Jun 2016 20:14
Why is technology evangelist Elon Musk so convinced that we are part of some giant computer simulation, wonders Geraint Lewis
A plasma tube to bring particles up to speed at SLAC
Phys.org - 3 Jun 2016 16:26
A team led by scientists from the University of California, Los Angeles and the Department of Energy's SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory has reached another milestone in developing a promising technology for accelerat...
Pioneering scientists behind gravitational wave discovery among Kavli Prize winners
Phys.org - 3 Jun 2016 22:53
Nine scientists have won the 2016 Kavli Prize for their groundbreaking work on gravitational waves, brain plasticity and atomic force microscopy.
Gene circuits in live cells can perform complex computations
e! Science News - 3 Jun 2016 22:25
Living cells are capable of performing complex computations on the environmental signals they encounter.
New Terahertz Imaging Technique Reveals Tiny, Hidden Objects
Physics Buzz - 3 Jun 2016 22:21
In an article published today in Science Advances, a team of UK researchers revealed a new way to see small or hidden objects using a technique known as terahertz imaging. This could lay the foundation for a new kind of ...
The Science of Football: Which Positions Take the Hardest Hits?
Live Science - 3 Jun 2016 20:28
A new study measured the impacts that football players take, and sorted them by position.
Technique could help climate models sweat the small stuff
Phys.org - 3 Jun 2016 20:25
A team of physicists and mathematicians has come up with a statistical technique that puts the fine details back into computer simulations of large-scale phenomena like air circulation in the atmosphere and currents in t...
Does the Sun Rotate?
Live Science - 3 Jun 2016 20:20
That giant flaming star in the sky does rotate, but moves at a much slower pace than the Earth.
Scientists find surprising magnetic excitations in a metallic compound
e! Science News - 3 Jun 2016 20:14
Some three-dimensional materials can exhibit exotic properties that only exist in "lower" dimensions. For example, in one-dimensional chains of atoms that emerge within a bulk sample, electrons can separate into three di...
Skyrmions--magnetic vortices for IT of the future
Phys.org - 3 Jun 2016 20:00
Magnetic vortices - so-called skyrmions - were predicted theoretically more than 25 years ago, but it has only been possible to observe them experimentally in magnetic materials in recent years. Skyrmions are stable, can...
Baby Panda Born At Zoo In Belgium | Raw Video
Live Science - 3 Jun 2016 19:57
A rare event occured at the Pairi Daiza Wildlife Park outside of Belgium when a male panda cub was born. There are less than 2000 pandas left in the wild and the zoo is calling the birth a "true miracle."
When it comes to making patients safer, is a hospital's 'safety culture' that important?
Science Daily - 3 Jun 2016 19:08
If you work in a hospital these days, you've probably gotten the invitation: Take a survey about how well you, your team and your hospital do at protecting patients from harm, and how empowered you feel to do the right t...
Cancer patients miss appointments, prescriptions due to inability to afford care
Science Daily - 3 Jun 2016 19:08
26 percent of a survey of adult cancer patients reported they paid more for medical care than they could afford, a new report outlines. Those patients also reported missing appointments and prescriptions because of affor...
Social adversity early in life may affect the expression of stress-related genes
Science Daily - 3 Jun 2016 19:06
New research suggests that early severe social deprivation may impact DNA modifications that affect the expression of stress-related genes.
Therapeutic antibody eculizumab caught in action
Science Daily - 3 Jun 2016 19:06
Scientists have used X-rays to understand how the therapeutic antibody eculizumab prevents our immune system from destroying red blood cells and damaging kidney tissue.
Cobimetinib in advanced melanoma with BRAF V600 mutation: Added benefit now considerable
Science Daily - 3 Jun 2016 19:03
Further advantages of the drug Cobimetinib in comparison with the comparator therapy resulted from the analyses subsequently submitted by the drug manufacturer in the commenting procedure.
Mechanisms of persistent infection for the human T-cell leukemia virus
Science Daily - 3 Jun 2016 19:02
New research has revealed the mechanisms of persistent latent infection of the human T-cell leukemia virus type 1 (HTLV-1). This is an important achievement that may contribute to the prevention of refractory leukemia, a...
Anti-DNA antibody prefers damaged dsDNA over native
Science Daily - 3 Jun 2016 19:02
Researchers have conducted a study of structural mechanisms of an antigen recognition and interaction of anti-DNA antibodies which provides a basis for understanding the role of DNA-containing immune complexes in human p...
Facial Recognition Tech Will Soon End Your Anonymity in Public
Singularity Hub - 3 Jun 2016 19:00
Nearly 250 million video surveillance cameras have been installed throughout the world, and chances are you've been seen by several of them today. Most people barely notice their presence anymore -- on the streets, insid...
Face it, the Olympics won't be axed. We need to Zika-proof them
New Scientist - 3 Jun 2016 18:18
Cancelling the $11-billion Games in Brazil is not a realistic option but there are things we can do to hinder the spread of Zika, says Debora MacKenzie
Why Pregnant Women Shouldn't Give In to Food Cravings
Live Science - 3 Jun 2016 18:15
Chocolate, cookies and ice cream -- here's why you shouldn't give in to those pregnancy food cravings.
The Universe May Be Expanding Faster Than Astronomers Thought
Scientific American - 3 Jun 2016 18:00
“Dark radiation” is named as a possible factor, as a new study suggests expansion could be 9 percent faster --