Science News
Hubble Telescope Reveals What 200 Billion Stars Look Like
Live Science - 27 Mar 2019 12:27Fullerenes bridge conductive gap in organic photovoltaics
EurekAlert! - 27 Mar 2019 06:00
(Wiley) Organic photovoltaics have achieved remarkably high efficiencies, but finding optimum combinations of materials for high-performance organic solar cells, which are also economically competitive, still presents a ...
Mirage software automates design of optical metamaterials
Phys.org - 27 Mar 2019 16:50
Sandia National Laboratories has created the first inverse-design software for optical metamaterials--meaning users start by describing the result they want, and the software fills in the steps to get there. The modern d...
Driverless car learns to perform high-speed turns without crashing
New Scientist - 27 Mar 2019 20:00
An autonomous car has learned to make high-speed racing turns without spinning out, paving the way for safer manoeuvres in emergency conditions
Fridges made from plastic crystals could help cut carbon emissions
New Scientist - 27 Mar 2019 20:00
Cooling devices like refrigerators and air conditioners consume a quarter of the world's electricity, but a plastic-based material could make them much greener
Mars used to have massive flowing rivers twice as wide as Earth's
New Scientist - 27 Mar 2019 20:00
Mars is now a freezing desert, but its surface used to be flowing with water and it turns out its rivers were once wider than Earth's
Lab-grown blood vessels given to people who need dialysis
New Scientist - 27 Mar 2019 20:00
Lab-grown blood vessels have been implanted in people for use with dialysis. The vessels could one day replace arteries damaged by heart disease
Move over, DNA. Life's other code is more subtle and far more powerful
New Scientist - 27 Mar 2019 20:00
Our cells use a sugary language to identify and interact with each other. Cracking it will let us marshal stem cells and create alternatives to antibiotics
The sugary language of our cells is giving us a new kind of medicine
New Scientist - 27 Mar 2019 20:00
Our cells use a sugar code more complex than DNA to identify and interact with each other. Cracking it will let us marshal stem cells and create alternatives to antibiotics
Traveling-wave tubes: The unsung heroes of space exploration
Phys.org - 27 Mar 2019 19:55
What do televisions and space exploration have in common? No, we're not talking about a cheesy physics joke; rather, this is the story of an often-overlooked piece of equipment that deserves a place in the annals of tele...
Machine learning used to understand and predict dynamics of worm behavior
Phys.org - 27 Mar 2019 19:19
Biophysicists have used an automated method to model a living system--the dynamics of a worm perceiving and escaping pain. The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) published the results, which worked wi...
Autonomous weed control via smart robots
Phys.org - 27 Mar 2019 18:49
Driving across Iowa, Hendrik J. Viljoen, distinguished professor of chemical and biological engineering at the University of Nebraska, noticed that soybean fields were becoming increasingly infested with weeds each seaso...
Dash of Meson, Pinch of Baryon: Scientists Find Recipe for Ultrarare Pentaquarks
Live Science - 27 Mar 2019 17:41Teenage psychotic experiences linked to high levels of air pollution
New Scientist - 27 Mar 2019 17:23
A study has found that psychotic experiences are more common among teenagers in the UK's most polluted areas
How do you square a passion for the ocean with deep-sea mining?
New Scientist - 27 Mar 2019 17:18
Marine ecologist Andrew Thaler is fascinated by how humans interact with the ocean, but concerned about the mining robots that are soon to be unleashed in the deep sea
Maths shows that this week's Brexit votes won't solve the UK's crisis
New Scientist - 27 Mar 2019 16:56
The UK House of Commons is voting to try to agree on a solution to Brexit, but game theory suggests it has chosen a particularly bad way of doing so, says Petros Sekeris
Waiting for neutrinos
Phys.org - 27 Mar 2019 16:50
On Feb. 24, 1987, light from a supernova that exploded 168,000 years ago in the Large Magellanic Cloud, a neighbor of the Milky Way, reached Earth. Astronomers Ian Shelton and Oscar Duhalde at the Las Campanas Observator...
Two letters by inventor Nikola Tesla surface in Serbia
Phys.org - 27 Mar 2019 16:40
A culture society in Serbia made public this month two letters that they say were written by late 19th- and early 20th-century inventor and electricity pioneer Nikola Tesla.
A direct current (DC) remote cloak to hide arbitrary objects
Phys.org - 27 Mar 2019 15:30
The ability to hide an arbitrary object with a cloak at a distance from the object is a unique task in photonics research, although the phenomenon is yet to be realized in practice. In a recent study now published in Lig...
Researchers demonstrate miniaturized, laser-driven particle accelerator
Phys.org - 27 Mar 2019 14:41
Munich physicists have succeeded in demonstrating plasma wakefield acceleration of subatomic particles in a miniaturized, laser-driven model. The new system provides a broader basis for the development of the next genera...
Article 13: A guide to the new EU copyright rules and the ban on memes
New Scientist - 27 Mar 2019 14:36
What is Article 13? How does it affect the way you use the internet? Should you be worried? Your questions answered about the EU's new copyright rules
India tests anti-satellite missile by destroying one of its satellites
New Scientist - 27 Mar 2019 14:28
While the test has almost certainly created a cloud of space debris, it was done at such a low altitude that the debris should soon fall to Earth