Friday, October 11, 2013

FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News

feedamail.com Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News

Jupiter Moons Perform Cosmic Shadow Dance This Week

Three of Jupiter's largest moons will cast their shadows simultaneously on the planet below them creating three solar eclipses at the same time: a rare cosmic event.


Read More »

Dancing Atoms in Glass Revealed for First Time

Scientists have captured the wiggle of tiny molecules of the world's thinnest glass as they undergo strain.


Read More »

Shooting Highlights Dangers of Distracted Living

If a murderer pointed a handgun directly at you, you'd notice, right? A recent incident in San Francisco proves that you might not — if you're staring at a cellphone.

Read More »

Ancient European Farmers and Hunter-Gatherers Coexisted, Sans Sex

Neolithic hunter-gatherers and farmers lived side by side without having sex for more than 2,000 years, new research suggests.


Read More »

Agency by Agency, Shutdown Hitting Federal Science Hard (Op-Ed)

Out of the News: Former Journalists Discuss a Profession in Crisis The Equation

Read More »

Is it Ever Right to Hang a Husky? (Op-Ed)

Expert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights.


Read More »

Marine Debris Pollution: Five Lessons Learned This Year (Op-Ed)

Switchboard. LiveScience's Expert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights. I'll make it new with much less thought it's symbolic and full of trash Lofty endearments whispered under your breath Easing my mind and seizing each new day Beyond and back I'm still the same Kicked over some old trash but I still waste       -Swingin' Utters, from "Five Lessons Learned"


Read More »

Scott Carpenter, early U.S. astronaut, dead at age 88, wife says

(Reuters) - Scott Carpenter, an early U.S. astronaut who orbited Earth in 1962, died on Thursday morning at age 88 of complications from a stroke, his wife Patty Carpenter said. He passed away at a Denver hospice center he had entered a number of days ago after suffering the stroke, she said. (Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis; Editing by Cynthia Johnston)

Read More »

Mercury Astronaut Scott Carpenter, Second American in Orbit, Dies at 88

Godspeed, Scott Carpenter.


Read More »

Scientists Speak Out on Harm of Research Hiatus (Op-Ed)

Perrin Ireland is senior science communications specialist for the Natural Resources Defense Council. This post was adapted from one that originally appeared on the NRDC blog Switchboard. Ireland contributed this article to LiveScience's Expert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights.

Read More »

Americans Deserve a Better Fracking Debate (Op-Ed)

Gretchen Goldman is an analyst in the Center for Science and Democracy at the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS). Goldman holds a PhD inenvironmental engineering and her current work looks at political and corporate interference in science policy. She contributed this article to LiveScience's Expert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights.

Read More »

As Ocean Warms, the Impacts Multiply (Op-Ed)

Expert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights


Read More »

Russia's Medvedev fires space agency chief

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev dismissed the country's space agency (Roskosmos) chief Vladimir Popovkin on Thursday, three months after the latest botched satellite launch. "I hope that a number of problems that we have unfortunately seen in Roskosmos' activity will be overcome with your appointment," Medvedev told Popovkin's successor to the post, former deputy defence minister Oleg Ostapenko. Popovkin, a former senior defence ministry official, denied media reports earlier this year saying that had been hospitalised after a drunken brawl in the Roskosmos office. ...


Read More »

Shutdown Could Flush Years of Antarctic Research Down the Drain

More than 10 years of planning, $10 million of government funding and tireless work from the team that discovered life in a lake buried beneath an Antarctic glacier earlier this year may largely go to waste due to the government shutdown.


Read More »

Tiny Comets Make Double Death Dives Into the Sun (Video)

A doomed comet is diving toward the sun today (Oct. 10) just days after another comet dove headlong into the star — a double-comet death dive that comes six weeks ahead of the much-anticipated solar encounter of yet another icy wanderer: the potentially dazzling Comet ISON.


Read More »

How to Keep Border Guards From Reading Your Laptop

Did you know that U.S. immigration agents can seize your laptop, cellphone, digital camera and any other electronic devices at the U.S. border, no justification required?

Read More »

UK Shudders as Venomous Spider Creeps Across Britain

There aren't many things that can bring a quiver to a Briton's stiff upper lip, but a venomous arachnid named the "false widow spider" seems to be giving the entire country a case of the heebie-jeebies.

Read More »

Kissing May Be Evolution's Matchmaker

You've got to kiss a lot of frogs to find your prince, as the saying goes. New research suggests the cliché is true on an evolutionary level.

Read More »

Factbox - The 2013 Nobel Prize Season

LONDON (Reuters) - Here is a look at who has won the Nobel prizes for 2013: Physiology or Medicine: James E. Rothman (United States) Randy W. Schekman (United States) Thomas C. Suedhof (Germany, United States) For - plotting how cells transfer vital materials such as hormones and brain chemicals to other cells, giving insight into diseases such as Alzheimer's, autism and diabetes. Physics: Francois Englert (Belgium) Peter W. Higgs (United Kingdom) For - predicting the existence of the Higgs boson particle that explains how elementary matter attained the mass to form stars and planets. ...

Read More »

Clues to Lost Prehistoric Code Discovered in Mesopotamia

Researchers studying clay balls from Mesopotamia have discovered clues to a lost code that was used for record-keeping about 200 years before writing was invented.


Read More »

Lonely Alien Planet Discovered Without a Parent Star

Astronomers have discovered a lonely planet that's floating by itself in deep space without orbiting a star.


Read More »

Got the Sunday Night Blues? Prepare on Friday

Sunday nights are riddled with anxiety for most employees, new research shows.

Read More »

Americans' Interest in Hemorrhoids Has Skyrocketed

The number of Americans searching online for information on hemorrhoids and how to treat them seems to have skyrocketed since 2008.

Read More »

Breast Cancer Blood Tests Available, But Not Proven

Detecting breast cancer with just a blood sample is the goal of several new tests hitting the market, but experts say it's too early to tell whether using such tests could make a difference in terms of patients' treatment and survival.

Read More »

Can Peanut Butter Sniff Out Early Signs of Alzheimer's?

Diagnosing Alzheimer's disease in its early stages has always been challenging — there is no single test that can accurately determine whether a person has Alzheimer's or some other form of dementia.

Read More »

Nobel Peace Prize Honors Watchdog of Chemical Weapons

The Nobel Peace Prize will be awarded to an organization "for its extensive efforts to eliminate chemical weapons," the Nobel Committee stated today (Oct.11).

Read More »

Herbal Supplements Often Contain Unlisted Ingredients

People who consume herbal products such as supplements may be getting more, or less, than they bargained for. Many of these products contain ingredients not listed on the label, a new study finds.

Read More »

Teachers' union launches TV ad blaming GOP for shutdown

The nation's largest teachers' union has bought TV and online ads blaming "tea party Republicans" for the federal government shutdown.

Read More »

Royal Buzzkill: Gourd Doesn't Hold Louis XVI's Blood

A new analysis that casts major doubt on the identification of a mummified head as belonging to French King Henry IV also calls into question the origin of a possibly more bizarre artifact: a blood-encrusted gourd.


Read More »

Antarctic Science Shutdown Leaves Workers Hanging

The shutdown of this year's U.S. Antarctic research season hurts thousands of scientists around the world. But the battalion of workers who keep the research operation running smoothly will also suffer.


Read More »

Nobel winner learned of prize on the street

LONDON (AP) — It took a state-of-the-art accelerator to prove his theories right, but Nobel Prize winner Peter Higgs says he learned of his award in physics the old-fashioned way: Word on the street.


Read More »

NASA Jupiter Probe Still In 'Safe Mode' After Earth Flyby Glitch

A NASA Jupiter probe remains in a protective "safe mode" one day after completing a speed-boosting flyby of Earth, but mission officials have expressed confidence that the issue will be solved soon.


Read More »

Digital Natives: The Most & Least Wired Countries Revealed

Kids these days. Always on their computers and cellphones "surfing the net."


Read More »

Amazing Photos of Jug-Shaped Nebula Reveal Rare Cosmic Sight

A telescope in Chile has snapped striking new images of an ethereal nebula 1,200 light-years from Earth with a rarely seen structure and a curious resemblance to a English toby jug.


Read More »

Hospital Sells Body Parts to Witch Doctors, Accusers Say

The second-largest hospital in the Southern African country of Swaziland may be operating a black market in human body parts used in magic spells, according to claims made by a reverend and others. 

Read More »

National Parks Closed, but Still Plenty of Leaf Peeping Spots

Leaf-peeping season is in full swing, but the federal government shutdown has shuttered the country's national parks, closing off some of the prime areas for checking out autumn's riotous colors. Luckily state parks and other natural areas boasting fall's leaves are still accessible.


Read More »

Ancient City's Strip Mall Unearthed in Greece

Along the scenic coast of the northern Aegean Sea, archaeologists have uncovered a Greek portico, which, 2,500 years ago, would have been a bustling public space, something like an ancient strip mall.


Read More »
 
Delievered to you by Feedamail.
Unsubscribe