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These NASA Photos of Space Station Crew Landing Are Simply Amazing Read More » SpaceX says boosting output, on track for 13 rocket launches this year Read More » China to open moon exploration program to private firms The Chinese government will open up its ambitious moon exploration program to private companies rather than simply relying on the state-owned sector as before, hoping to boost technological breakthroughs, a major newspaper said on Tuesday. The next mission to the moon, to be carried out by the Chang'e 4 probe in the next two years or so, will serve as a platform "for technological research and development, product tests as well as data application" for private companies, the official China Daily said, citing a government statement. "The move will help break the monopoly in the space field, accelerate technological innovation, reduce the government's investment and improve efficiency," added the statement, released by the State Administration of Science, Technology and Industry for National Defence, which oversees the space program. The English-language newspaper cited an unnamed source as saying China should learn from the example of the United States, which has shown the "obvious" benefits of private enterprise getting involved. Read More »Cervantes remains found in Madrid convent, investigators believe Read More » Oldest Roman Fort Protected Soldiers from 'Infamous Pirates' Read More » Zodiacal Light and Meteors Light Up the Night (Photo) Read More » 17-Million-Year-Old Whale Skull Helps Place Humanity's First Steps Read More » Bacterial Paintings? New Art Uses Tiny Life Forms More and more artists are harnessing living creatures to make political statements or illuminate the underpinnings of the modern world, researchers said here Friday (March 13) at the 2015 South by Southwest (SXSW) Interactive festival. The urge to turn life into other things is ancient, said Daniel Grushkin, a freelance journalist and co-founder of Genspace, a community laboratory in New York City. Life imitates art? The artwork highlights the fact that there are trillions of bacteria in our body, said Wythe Marschall, a doctoral candidate in the history of science at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Read More »Cough Medicine Ingredient May Aid Diabetes Fight An ingredient in many over-the-counter cough suppressants seems to improve the release of insulin in humans, a discovery that may lead to new treatments for Type 2 diabetes. Doctors at Heinrich Heine University in Düsseldorf, Germany, found that the drug dextromethorphan increased the release of insulin from the pancreas in a series of studies conducted first in mice, then in human pancreatic tissue samples, and then in a small sample of people with diabetes. Dextromethorphan, often indicated by the letters DM on the labels of cold medications, has few serious side effects, particularly in comparison to the current arsenal of drugs used to treat people with Type 2 diabetes, the researchers noted. Type 2 diabetes affects about 350 million people globally, according to the World Health Organization. Read More »Diet Soda Linked to Increased Belly Fat in Older Adults Older adults who drink diet soda may experience greater increases in their waist size over a decade than those who do not drink diet soda, according to a new study. Researchers found that the average increase in waist circumference among the people in the study who drank diet soda daily was more than triple that of the people who did not drink diet soda. Among the people who drank diet soda only occasionally, the increase was more than double that of those who did not drink diet soda. "The more people drank diet sodas, the more their waistlines expanded," said study author Sharon Fowler, a researcher at the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio. Read More »Powdered Alcohol Is Now Legal — But Is It Safe? Lawmakers are expressing concern that Palcohol could be more easily transported than liquid alcohol, and thus sneaked into places where alcohol is not allowed. "There are very serious concerns about the illegal use of powdered alcohol by young people, possibly even bringing it into schools or other events and locations that prohibit alcohol consumption," New York State Senator Joseph Griffo, said in a statement last year. But a packet of Palcohol is much harder to conceal" than liquid alcohol, the company making Palcohol says on its website. A packet of the substance measures 4 inches by 6 inches (10.2 centimeters by 15.2 cm), which is five times bigger than a 50-milliliter (1.7 ounces) bottle of liquid alcohol. Read More »Aspirin's colon-cancer benefits backfire for some DNA types: study By Sharon Begley NEW YORK (Reuters) - Although numerous studies have shown that regular use of aspirin or related drugs can reduce the risk of colorectal cancer by about 30 percent, scientists have found an important exception: The medicines can actually increase the risk in people with certain genetic variants, new research shows. The result, published on Tuesday, is yet another step on the road to "precision medicine," which aims to match treatments to patients' genetic make-up. If confirmed, it could alter recommendations for preventing colorectal cancer, which is projected to kill 49,700 people in the United States this year. In an editorial accompanying a paper in the Journal of the American Medical Association, Dr. Richard Wender of the American Cancer Society and Thomas Jefferson University called the discovery "scientifically noteworthy." "I anticipate the time when genome sequencing to determine a lifelong (colorectal-cancer) prevention and screening strategy is a reality, although it's some time off," he said in an interview. Read More »Aspirin's colon-cancer benefits backfire for some DNA types - study By Sharon Begley NEW YORK (Reuters) - Although numerous studies have shown that regular use of aspirin or related drugs can reduce the risk of colorectal cancer by about 30 percent, scientists have found an important exception: The medicines can actually increase the risk in people with certain genetic variants, new research shows. The result, published on Tuesday, is yet another step on the road to "precision medicine," which aims to match treatments to patients' genetic make-up. If confirmed, it could alter recommendations for preventing colorectal cancer, which is projected to kill 49,700 people in the United States this year. In an editorial accompanying a paper in the Journal of the American Medical Association, Dr. Richard Wender of the American Cancer Society and Thomas Jefferson University called the discovery "scientifically noteworthy." "I anticipate the time when genome sequencing to determine a lifelong (colorectal-cancer) prevention and screening strategy is a reality, although it's some time off," he said in an interview. Read More » | ||||
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Tuesday, March 17, 2015
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Monday, March 16, 2015
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Horse dung has scientists on scent of antibiotic success Chemists around the world are involved in a race against time to find a solution to the growing problem of bacteria becoming resistant to antibiotics. It's a major threat to the health of the global population, which had long assumed that antibiotics would always be available to cure bacterial illness. The scientific community hopes to be able to develop a new range of antibiotics to replace those that are increasingly losing their ability to work against infections like Tuberculosis (TB). A research team led by Markus Aebi, Professor of Mycology at ETH Zurich (the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich), believe they may have found the answer. Read More »When Will Virtual-Reality Headsets Stop Making People Sick? Read More » Superconductors Could Help Physicists Find 'Gravity Particles' Read More » Ancient Receipt Proves Egyptian Taxes Were Worse Than Yours Read More » Coral Pyramids in Micronesia Date Back to Middle Ages Read More » Forged in a Flash: Volcanic Lightning Forms Glass Balls Read More » Will the Apple Watch Catch On? Apple's newest product — the souped-up timepiece called the Apple Watch — is bound to become a cultural phenomenon that millions of people will buy, according to marketing experts not affiliated with the company. "It's got the Apple name and mystique behind it," said Scott Thorne, a marketing professor at Southeast Missouri State University in Jefferson City. "I'm not sure if it will be quite the game-changer that, say, the iPhone was, because it's really hard to capture the proverbial lightning in the bottle twice," Thorne told Live Science. Samsung, LG, Pebble, Asus and other manufacturers already produce smartwatches, most of which cost far less than even the lowest-priced Apple Watch, and these other devices have failed to catch on. Read More »Chilean Volcano Coated in Ash After Eruption, New Images Show Read More » Confirmed: Disneyland Measles Outbreak Linked to Low Vaccination Rates Low vaccination rates are likely responsible for the large measles outbreak that began at Disneyland in California last December, a new analysis suggests. The researchers estimated that the MMR (measles, mumps and rubella) vaccination rate among the people who were exposed to measles in that outbreak may be as low as 50 percent, and is likely no higher than 86 percent. Since the beginning of this year, 127 cases of measles in the United Stateshave been linked to the Disneyland outbreak, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Because measles is such a highly contagious virus, vaccination rates of 96 percent to 99 percent are necessary to prevent outbreaks, Majumder said. Read More »Seven strategies for keeping women in STEM fields Now an academic panel has developed a seven-point plan for achieving gender equity in so-called STEM fields: science, technology, engineering and math. The 28-member Initiative on Women in Science and Engineering Working Group hopes to "ensure that women not just enter science, but remain, compete, and truly excel in scientific careers." Women account for half the college-educated American workforce but only 28 percent of science and engineering workers, according to the National Science Board. Susan Solomon, CEO of the New York Stem Cell Foundation, who convened the panel, says STEM fields are too critical to leave behind half the nation's brainpower. Co-author Paola Arlotta, a Harvard University professor of stem cell and regenerative biology, won such an award at Massachusetts General Hospital, where the Claflin Distinguished Scholar Award helps sustain research productivity during child-rearing years. Read More »Total Solar Eclipse of 2015 Occurs This Week: How to See It Read More » XCOR Aerospace Picks Ex-Air Force Official as New CEO Read More » Yeti Debate Swirls: Study Reveals Origin of Mysterious Hairs Read More » El Niño Can Predict Tornado Season's Severity Read More » | ||||
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