Sign In
to Vote &
Create Storyboards.
 

Science News

Location American Science News for 6 March 2019
For Joy Milne, Parkinson's is musky, cancer earthy and Alzheimer's smells like vanilla. Following her nose could pave the way for future tests
Read More
1
0
How a Distant Alien World Was Saved from an Interstellar Exile A distant alien world that was potentially on its way into exile in interstellar space was rescued by the gravitational pull of a passing pair of stars, a new study argues.
Read More
1
0

How Engineered Nanoparticles Gave Mice Infrared Vision

Singularity Hub - 6 Mar 2019 17:00
How Engineered Nanoparticles Gave Mice Infrared Vision Efforts to use technology to enhance humans' natural capabilities are moving out of the scientific fringes. A recent study on mice suggests it may eventually be possible to imbue people with infrared vision by injecting ...
Read More
1
0

Training Beyond Exhaustion Can Prevent Learning

Neuroscience News - 6 Mar 2019 01:47
Overuse of our motor skills causes fatigue that can actually harm rather than help when it comes to sports training, practicing music or art, and rehabilitating injury.
Read More
1
0
Improving molecular imaging using a deep learning approach Generating comprehensive molecular images of organs and tumors in living organisms can be performed at ultra-fast speed using a new deep learning approach to image reconstruction developed by researchers at Rensselaer Po...
Read More
0
0
Researchers find neural activation patterns were predictive of the contents of voluntary visual imagery as far as 11 seconds before the choice of what to imagine. These results suggest that the contents of future visual ...
Read More
0
0
Rabbit fossils suggest that Neanderthals had a varied diet including hunting small, fast prey, meaning they were very adaptable
Read More
0
0
Can entangled qubits be used to probe black holes? Physicists have used a seven-qubit quantum computer to simulate the scrambling of information inside a black hole, heralding a future in which entangled quantum bits might be used to probe the mysterious interiors of the...
Read More
0
0
We're told that switching phone networks to the fifth-generation of wireless tech will give us blistering speeds, but it's not clear anyone actually needs an upgrade
Read More
0
0

Looks Matter When It Comes to Success in STEM, Study Shows

Neuroscience News - 6 Mar 2019 19:25
Researchers look into how racially stereotypical appearances and prejudice affect outcomes for students in STEM fields.
Read More
0
0
A rise in violent knife crime in the UK has led to calls for an increase in police numbers, but Scotland is taking an alternative approach to tackle the issue
Read More
0
0
Solar Wind Leaves 'Sunburn' Scars on Lunar Surface, NASA Missions Reveals People on Earth are familiar with the sun's powerful rays -- but the moon suffers from sunburn, too.
Read More
0
0
Here's Your Chance to Name 5 Jupiter Moons! (No Moon McMoonfaces, Please) Last summer, scientists announced the discovery of a dozen new moons orbiting Jupiter. But now comes the hard part: naming them.
Read More
0
0
Even in the worst climate change scenarios, wind and solar power generation levels in Europe can be maintained, despite UN predictions that cloudier and stormier weather will affect output
Read More
0
0
Axolotl salamander genes that allow the neural tube and nerve fibers to regenerate after spinal cord damage have been identified. These genes are also found in humans, but are activated differently.
Read More
0
0

Spin devices rev up

Phys.org - 6 Mar 2019 17:28
Spin devices rev up Electric currents drive all our electronic devices. The emerging field of spintronics looks to replace electric currents with what are known as spin currents. Researchers from the University of Tokyo have made a breakthr...
Read More
0
0

Download the Big Bang on your smartphone

Phys.org - 6 Mar 2019 17:23
Download the Big Bang on your smartphone Experience the 13.8-billion-year-old story of the universe in just seven minutes with CERN's new Big Bang app. Launched today at the Google Arts and Culture event in Washington D.C., the app, free and available for downl...
Read More
0
0
Belief in a punitive god may make people more likely to give money to someone who lives far away, which could help cohesion in large societies
Read More
0
0
The optomechanical Kerker effect: Controlling light with vibrating nanoparticles For the Kerker effect to occur, particles need to have electric and magnetic polarizabilities of the same strength. This, however, is very challenging to achieve, as magnetic optical resonances in small particles are rel...
Read More
0
0

The science of knitting, unpicked

Phys.org - 6 Mar 2019 16:17
The science of knitting, unpicked Dating back more than 3,000 years, knitting is an ancient form of manufacturing, but Elisabetta Matsumoto of the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta believes that understanding how stitch types govern shape and st...
Read More
0
0
A new role for the hippocampus involving pattern separation and conjunctive representation in reinforcement learning is discussed.
Read More
0
0
Scientists study neutron scattering for researching magnetic materials Physicists from the University of Luxembourg and their research partners have demonstrated for the first time in a comprehensive study how magnetic materials can be examined using neutron scattering techniques. The scien...
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