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Hints of Colonial Pollution Hidden in Andean Ice Cap Read More » Orion Nebula Glows in Amateur Astronomer's Amazing Photo Read More » Cheaper robots could replace more factory workers: study The falling cost of industrial robots will allow manufacturers to use them to replace more factory workers over the next decade while lowering labor costs, according to new research. Robots now perform roughly 10 percent of manufacturing tasks that can be done by machines, according to the Boston Consulting Group. In turn, labor costs stand to drop by 16 percent on average globally over that time, according to the research. The shift will mean an increasing demand for skilled workers who can operate the machines, said Hal Sirkin, a senior partner at Boston Consulting. Read More »America's Amazing, Drivable Crater: Alamo Impact Yields Secrets Read More » 100 Ancient Cult Sites Discovered in Israel Read More » SpaceX to Launch Satellite, Return 2 Spacecraft to Earth Today: Watch Live Read More » Europe's Experimental Mini-Space Shuttle to Launch Wednesday The European Space Agency (ESA) plans to launch an experimental space plane this Wednesday to test out technologies needed for vehicles to survive the return to Earth from space. The unmanned space plane, called the Intermediate eXperimental Vehicle (IXV), is slated to blast off Wednesday (Feb. 11) at 8 a.m. EST (1300 GMT) from French Guiana. "The crucial moments will certainly be those after the blackout phase … The signal from the vehicle after this phase will be an important sign," Giorgio Tumino, ESA's project manager for IXV, told Space.com via email. Read More »Peruvian ice cap harbors evidence of conquistadors' avarice Read More » Stress May Affect Heart Attack Recovery Stress may play an important role in a person's ability to recover from a heart attack, a new study suggests. Researchers at Yale University found that younger and middle-age men and women who had more mental stress in their lives tended to have worse recovery one month after a heart attack than those under less stress. The data also showed that the women in the study experienced greater mental stress than the men, and the researchers said this difference might partially explain why women generally recover worse than men after heart attacks. A higher level of mental stress is known to affect blood flow in the heart and is linked with hardening of the arteries, said study researcher Xiao Xu, an assistant professor of obstetrics, gynecology and reproductive sciences at the Yale School of Medicine in New Haven, Connecticut. Read More »Moon objects found in astronaut Neil Armstrong's closet Read More » Glacier's Groans Can Pinpoint Iceberg Calving Read More » Drones May Aid Bird Studies Without Ruffling Feathers Read More » SpaceX signs deal for landing pad in Florida Read More » Europe to test spaceplane in bid for its first reusable space tech The European Space Agency (ESA) is due to launch an experimental spaceplane from its spaceport in French Guiana on Wednesday which it hopes will pave the way towards Europe's first reusable space transportation systems. ESA's Intermediate eXperimental Vehicle (IXV), which is the size of a car, will lift off at 1300 GMT (0800 ET) aboard a rocket before splashing down in the Pacific Ocean around 100 minutes later. IXV, which ESA says cost around 150 million euros ($169 million) in design, development and related ground support, will separate from the rocket at an altitude of 320 kilometers (200 miles) and will coast up to an altitude of 450 kilometers before beginning re-entry. While Europe is well advanced in launcher technology and in orbiting systems, it is behind the United States when it comes to systems enabling a return to earth, IXV project manager Giorgio Tumino told Reuters. Read More »How 'Parenthood' Helped Erase the Stigma of Mental Illness (Op-Ed) Brian Dyak is president, CEOand co-founder of the Entertainment Industries Council (EIC), and executive producer of EICnetwork.tv. Through its dynamic writing, "Parenthood" has taken an active approach to mental wellness: a family-support approach. For millions of viewers, the show raised mental health awareness and showed that people can recover from such situations and live happy, productive lives. Read More »An Evolving Guide to the (Unfinished) Universe (Op-Ed) Read More » 5 Unexpected Home Hazards Send Too Many Kids to the ER (Op-Ed) Dr. Vatsala Bhaskar is a board-certified pediatrician on staff at CentraState Medical Center in Freehold, N.J., where she also maintains a private practice. In a single year, 17,230 children under the age of six have been accidentally poisoned by these packets. Read More »Yoga Becoming More Popular With Kids, Adults A growing number of kids and adults in the United States are practicing yoga, according to new results from a government survey. Over the last decade, the percentage of U.S. adults who said they practiced yoga increased from 5.1 percent in 2002 to 9.5 percent in 2012, according to the survey, which was conducted by the National Institutes of Health and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Yoga among children is also on the rise: the percentage of children ages 4 to 17 who do yoga increased from 2.3 percent in 2007 to 3.1 percent in 2012, which translates to about 400,000 more kids practicing yoga. Part of the reason for the rise may be the increase in the number of yoga studios and instructors that has occurred in recent years, making yoga more accessible to a larger number of people, the researchers said. Read More »SpaceX Dragon Capsule Leaves Space Station for Ocean Splashdown Read More » | ||||
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Tuesday, February 10, 2015
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
Monday, February 9, 2015
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
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SpaceX Launch of DSCOVR Space Weather Satellite Delayed by Radar Glitch Read More » How Would the World Change If We Found Alien Life? Read More » Human Cadavers Provide New Skin for Chronic Wounds Human skin from cadavers that has had its cells removed can help treat wounds, researchers say. This new treatment could prove especially helpful for chronic skin wounds, which are a growing threat to public health, scientists added. With an aging population and increasing rates of diseases linked to ulcers and other skin wounds, such as diabetes, obesity and heart disease, the prevalence and costs of such wounds are likely to rise in the future, said study senior author Ardeshir Bayat, a bioengineer and clinician-scientist at the University of Manchester in England. In the past three decades, scientists have developed a variety of skin substitutes to help treat wounds. Read More »Global Warming May Spawn More Southeast US Tornadoes Read More » Killer Shrimp Could Invade the Great Lakes Read More » Mysterious Stone Carving May Contain Old Message Read More » Cost-of-Smoking Estimates Were Grossly Exaggerated Smoking a pack of cigarettes a day will cost a person upwards of $2 million in tobacco costs and other expenses over his or her lifetime — at least according to a study conducted last month by WalletHub, a financial advice website. WalletHub calculated costs between $100,000 and $200,000 depending on the state where one lives, based on a recalculation of data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention at a population-wide level. Read More »Fires Intensified Deadly Tornado Outbreak Read More » Tiny Drones Capture Gorgeous Views of Sizzling Lava Lake Read More » Is It Too Late to Get a Measles Vaccination? The current measles outbreak in the United States has highlighted the dangers of skipped vaccinations, and some people may be wondering whether it's too late to get vaccinated now. If an adult or child had not received the MMR [measles, mumps and rubella] vaccine, "it's not too late," said Dr. Ambreen Khalil, an infectious-disease specialist at Staten Island University Hospital in New York City. "It is better to get an MMR vaccine again, if one does not remember," Khalil added. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommends that adults who were born after 1956 get at least one dose of the vaccine, unless they can show that they have either been vaccinated or had all three diseases that the MMR vaccine protects against. Read More »SpaceX Launch of DSCOVR Satellite, Rocket Landing Try Delayed to Tuesday Read More » SpaceX launch with deep-space weather buoy reset for Tuesday Read More » Ex-Los Alamos scientist to be sentenced in nuke spy sting A former Los Alamos National Laboratory scientist who pleaded guilty to trying to help Venezuela develop a nuclear weapon is set to be sentenced. Pedro Leonardo Mascheroni and his wife, Marjorie Roxby ... Read More »NASA Probe Spies Mars Rover Curiosity from Space (Photo) Read More » More Floods Hitting Midwest States Read More » Amazing! Original Magna Carta Copy Found in Scrapbook Read More » | ||||
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