| ||||
Moon Meets Beautiful Hyades Star Cluster Sunday Morning Read More » What Pluto Can Teach Scientists About 'Star Wars' Planet Tatooine Read More » Weird Reason Plutonium Doesn't Act Like Other Metals Read More » Giant Redheaded Centipede Photo Goes Viral, Horrifies the Internet Read More » Ice Lab Plays It Cool for Pluto Flyby Read More » Pluto Flyby: How NASA Space Probes Will Track Epic Encounter Read More » Eye Color Linked to Alcoholism Risk People with light-colored eyes may have a higher risk of alcoholism than people with dark-brown eyes, new research suggests. In the study, researchers looked at 1,263 Americans of European ancestry, including 992 people who were diagnosed with alcohol dependence and 271 people who were not diagnosed with alcohol dependence. "This suggests an intriguing possibility — that eye color can be useful in the clinic for alcohol dependence diagnosis," study co-author Arvis Sulovari, a graduate student in cellular, molecular and biological science at the University of Vermont, said in a statement. Read More »Severe Burns May Let 'Bad Bacteria' Take Over the Gut People who have gotten severe burns are known to be at risk for a host of complications, but there may be other consequences lurking deeper within the body: A new study finds that a burn may change the community of bacteria within a person's gut, and possibly lead to an increased risk of infection. In the study, researchers analyzed fecal bacteria from four patients with severe burns over at least 30 percent of their body, and compared these bacteria with fecal bacteria of people with minor burns. In fact, Enterobacteriaceae made up 31.9 percent of the gut bacteria in the people with severe burns, compared with just 0.5 percent in those with minor burns, according to the study, published today (July 8) in the journal PLOS ONE. Read More »'Hacking' Gut Bacteria Could Spur New Medical Treatments Faintly glowing mouse droppings are now evidence that one of the most common microbes in the human gut can be easily "hacked," or genetically modified, researchers say. The finding means that the microbe could one day be used in making medicines or detecting diseases, the researchers said. The microbe only makes up about 0.1 percent of human intestinal bacteria. Read More »Most Americans Still Don't Eat Their Fruits & Veggies Didn't eat enough fruits and vegetables today? Join the club — 87 percent of Americans don't meet recommendations for fruit consumption, and 91 percent don't meet recommendations for vegetable consumption, according to a new U.S. report. Researchers analyzed a 2013 survey of more than 373,000 American adults in all 50 states who answered questions about how much fruit and vegetables they eat. Read More »Pluto's Complex Surface Coming into Focus (Photo) Read More » | ||||
| ||||
|
Saturday, July 11, 2015
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
Friday, July 10, 2015
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
| ||||
PlanetiQ tests sensor for commercial weather satellites By Irene Klotz CAPE CANAVERAL (Reuters) - PlanetiQ, a privately owned company, is beginning a key test intended to pave the way for the first commercial weather satellites. The Bethesda, Maryland-based company is among a handful of startups designing commercial weather satellite networks, similar to what companies like DigitalGlobe, Planet Labs and Google Inc's Skybox Imaging are undertaking in the sister commercial satellite industry of remote sensing. "I think weather is the next big market," PlanetiQ's chief executive and president, Anne Hale Miglarese, said. Read More »'The Wait' Is Nearly Over: New Video Highlights July 14 Pluto Flyby Read More » Buzzkill: global warming shrinks range of pollinating bumblebees Read More » Bear necessities: low metabolism lets pandas survive on bamboo Read More » Cause of SpaceX Rocket Explosion Still Unknown, Elon Musk Says Read More » How Hungry Pitcher Plants Get the Poop They Need Read More » Giant Pandas' Lazy Lifestyle Justified by Science Read More » Earth's Groundwater Basins Are Running Out of Water Read More » Fin Count: Global Shark Census Will Aid Conservation Read More » Distant Pluto finally gets its day in the sun Read More » 'Star Trek: Axanar' Fan Film Kicks Fundraising into Warp Drive Read More » Ancient Jellies Had Spiny Skeletons, No Tentacles Read More » Pluto 'Totally Different' from Big Moon Charon, New Photos Show Read More » | ||||
| ||||
|