Science News
Facebook's AI mathematician can solve university calculus problems
New Scientist - 20 Dec 2019 19:00
An artificial intelligence built by Facebook has learned to solve university-level calculus problems in seconds
Using light to encrypt communications
Phys.org - 20 Dec 2019 19:00
Researchers of the UT found a new way to protect data from attacks with quantum computers. As they published today in New Journal of Physics. With quantum computers on the rise, we can no longer exclude the possibility t...
An atomic view of the trigger for the heartbeat
Science Daily - 20 Dec 2019 16:43
Tiny pores in heart cells generate electrical signals to initiate each heart beat. Structural studies of these channels provide details on their functions, and also on their malfunction due to different inherited mutatio...
Scientists build an exceptional surface out of exceptional points
Phys.org - 20 Dec 2019 11:43
Scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory are exceptional in many respects. Working in collaboration with the Imperial College London, for example, they have conducted research on a ...
Could every country have a Green New Deal? Stanford report charts paths for 143 countries
EurekAlert! - 20 Dec 2019 09:00
(Cell Press) Researchers offer an updated vision of the steps that 143 countries around the world can take to attain 100% clean, renewable energy by the year 2050. The new roadmaps, publishing Dec. 20 in the journal One ...
Scientists discover medicinal cannabis substitute for treating Parkinson's disease
Neuroscience News - 21 Dec 2019 01:41
HU-308, a cannabis substitute, can reduce L-dopa induced dyskinesia in Parkinson's patients.
Neurons responsible for rapid eye movements/REM during sleep identified
Neuroscience News - 21 Dec 2019 01:25
Nucleus papilion neurons play an important role in eye movement during REM sleep.
Counting photons is now routine enough to need standards
Phys.org - 21 Dec 2019 01:03
Since the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) built its first superconducting devices for counting photons (the smallest units of light) in the 1990s, these once-rare detectors have become popular resea...
The Most Energetic Flashes of Light in the Universe Produce Deadly Nuclear Reactions
Live Science - 21 Dec 2019 00:41
Gamma-ray bursts are even worse than we thought.
Luxury consumption can fuel 'impostor syndrome' among some buyers
Neuroscience News - 20 Dec 2019 23:58
Those who purchase luxury goods often feel inauthentic and less confident when sporting their buys. Rather than affirming a buyers' sense of status, luxury purchases often foster an impostor syndrome.
A surprising new source of attention in the brain
Neuroscience News - 20 Dec 2019 23:35
The posterior inferotemporal cortex plays a critical role in attention. Researchers say the discovery may require rethinking old concepts of attentional control.
Obesity in pregnant moms linked to lag in their sons' development and IQ
Neuroscience News - 20 Dec 2019 23:17
Obesity during pregnancy was associated with lower IQ among boys, but not girls, at age 7. The findings suggest maternal obesity has long=term implications for early cognitive development.
Emotion concepts are not the same worldwide
Neuroscience News - 20 Dec 2019 23:03
Study reveals substantial variations in how different languages conceptualize emotions. The findings challenge assumptions about the universal nature of emotional semantics.
Obesity could affect brain development in children
Neuroscience News - 20 Dec 2019 22:07
Obese children tend to have a thinner prefrontal cortex and cerebral cortex. The findings could explain why there is a correlation between obesity in children and decreased executive function.
Study suggests universal method for measuring light power
Phys.org - 20 Dec 2019 21:51
Always on the lookout for better ways to measure all kinds of things, researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have published a detailed study suggesting an "elegant" improved definition f...
Space-time metasurface makes light reflect only in one direction
Phys.org - 20 Dec 2019 21:24
Light propagation is usually reciprocal, meaning that the trajectory of light travelling in one direction is identical to that of light travelling in the opposite direction. Breaking reciprocity can make light propagate ...
'The Demon in the Machine' is named physics book of the year in UK
Phys.org - 20 Dec 2019 20:50
Paul Davies' newest book, The Demon in the Machine, takes aim at one of the great outstanding scientific enigmas--what is life, how and why does it emerge and what distinguishes the living from the non-living? The book, ...
Everyone is jumping on the quantum computing bandwagon, but why?
New Scientist - 20 Dec 2019 20:18
At a gathering of quantum computing experts from around the world, nobody seemed quite sure what quantum computers will be good for - if anything at all
Boeing's Starliner spacecraft fails to reach ISS due to a broken clock
New Scientist - 20 Dec 2019 19:13
Boeing's Starliner spacecraft launched on 20 December, but problems with one of its clocks meant that it will not be able to complete its mission to the ISS
Retail Robots Are on the Rise--at Every Level of the Industry
Singularity Hub - 20 Dec 2019 19:00
The robots are coming! The robots are coming! On our sidewalks, in our skies, in our every store... Over the next decade, robots will enter the mainstream of retail. As countless robots work behind the scenes to stock sh...
No storm in a teacup: It's a cyclone on a silicon chip
Phys.org - 20 Dec 2019 16:50
University of Queensland researchers have combined quantum liquids and silicon-chip technology to study turbulence for the first time, opening the door to new navigation technologies and improved understanding of the tur...
Researchers produce first laser ultrasound images of humans
Phys.org - 20 Dec 2019 16:47
For most people, getting an ultrasound is a relatively easy procedure: As a technician gently presses a probe against a patient's skin, sound waves generated by the probe travel through the skin, bouncing off muscle, fat...