| ||||
Scientists enlist the big gun to get climate action: Faith Read More » AP Interview: Redford says fighting global warming is urgent Read More » Orbital heads back to International Space Station on cargo run Read More » Watt or Fleming? RBS seeks Scottish scientist for plastic banknote Read More » Scientists enlist the big gun to get climate action: Faith Read More » Mysterious Egyptian Mummy Has Head Full of Dirt Read More » Ancient 'Wand' May Be Oldest Example of Lead Work in the Levant Read More » Mark Zuckerberg's Donation: What Can You Buy with $45 Billion? Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg and his wife, Priscilla Chan, made a shocking announcement this week, saying they would donate 99 percent of their financial worth over their lifetimes. Though the charitable act would have several tax benefits, as The New York Times pointed out, the power couple said they hope to use that money to "advance human potential and promote equality for all children in the next generation," according to a long post by Zuckerberg on his Facebook page. In focusing on philanthropy, the duo joins other high-profile billionaires, such as Warren Buffett and Bill Gates, who have committed vast sums of money in an effort to reduce poverty and improve conditions around the world. Read More »Superquiet Supersonic: NASA Aims for Softer Booms Read More » 400-Year-Old Embalmed Hearts Found Under French Convent Read More » New Superbug's Genetic Trick Could Help It Spread Health experts are keeping a close eye on a type of antibiotic-resistant bacteria called CRE that, while still rare, has the potential to become more widespread in the United States. A new report released on Thursday said that in the past five years, researchers have identified 43 patients in the United States who became sick with infections from one type of CRE. These cases all involved CRE that share a particular method of defeating the antibiotics: they have enzymes called OXA-48-like carbapenemases that break down the drugs, said the report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Read More »Wi-Fi 'Allergies': Is Electromagnetic Hypersensitivity Real? Read More » Many People Who Would Benefit from Statins Aren't Taking Them The study found that cholesterol-lowering drugs would be recommended for about 78 million U.S. adults because they have either high cholesterol levels or risk factors for heart disease. And although lifestyle changes such as exercise and weight loss can help lower cholesterol levels, 35.5 percent of adults who would benefit from lowering their cholesterol levels said they aren't taking these drugs or making lifestyle changes to lower their cholesterol levels. Minority populations, including blacks and Mexican Americans, were less likely than whites to be taking cholesterol-lowering drugs, the researchers said. Read More »9 Hacks for Making Healthier Holiday Cookies When a huge array of holiday cookies is out on display, people do not have just one cookie and feel satisfied, said Libby Mills, a nutrition and cooking coach in Philadelphia and spokeswoman for the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics. Those extra calories can add up to too many, at a time when people are already frequently celebrating around food and beverages, Mills said. This is a good reason to be smart about the size of cookie that you eat or bake, and to stick with a smaller cookie, said Sara Haas, a dietitian and chef in Chicago and spokeswoman for the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics. Read More »Stick-Figure Science: Cartoonist Makes Complicated Stuff Simple Read More » CERN in a Shoebox? Tiny Particle Accelerators Are Coming Read More » Little Male Songbird Makes Colorful Splash at Brooklyn Park Read More » Fusion power getting closer, say UK scientists By Jim Drury As world leaders meet in Paris to agree a legal framework aimed at limiting use of fossil fuels and the resulting rises in global temperatures, a UK company says it could be as little as five years from making "reactor relevant" fusion, a potential game changer in energy production. A British company believes it is within five years of achieving "reactor relevant" fusion, a major landmark in the six decade long scientific search for the veritable Holy Grail of energy production. Fusion is how stars produce energy. It occurs when the nuclei of light atoms, such as hydrogen, are fused together under extreme pressure and heat. Tokamak Energy, from Oxfordshire, believes that the third version of their compact, spherical tokamak reactor will be able to reach temperatures of 100 million degrees Celsius by 2020. Read More »Chinese researchers unveil brain powered car Read More » | ||||
| ||||
|
Monday, December 7, 2015
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
Saturday, December 5, 2015
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
| ||||
AP Interview: Redford says fighting global warming is urgent Read More » The Latest: Redford says fighting global warming is urgent
| ||||
| ||||
|
Friday, December 4, 2015
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
| ||||
Hawaii court revokes permit for telescope project on volcano Issuing the permit to construct a 180-foot high, $1.4 billion astronomical observatory on the Mauna Kea volcano on Hawaii's Big Island did not comply with case law, statutes or the state constitution, court documents showed. It also violated the protections of native Hawaiian customs and traditions. In November, the court temporarily blocked construction of the telescope, a collaboration between China, India, Canada, Japan and the United States, after a challenge by Native Hawaiians and environmentalists who said the project would damage sacred lands. Read More »Habitat loss seen as rising threat to world's migratory birds Read More » Federal Gun Research Still Stalled Just hours before a mass shooting in San Bernardino, California, left 14 dead Wednesday (Dec. 3), the group Doctors for America, which advocates for changes in the health care system, petitioned Congress to end the federal ban on gun violence research. It may have been a confusing request for many Americans — after all, President Barack Obama ordered an immediate end to the ban after the 2012 shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School. Shouldn't the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the National Institutes of Health (NIH) be using federal funds to study the problem by now? Read More »Gene summit organizers urge caution on human gene editing By Julie Steenhuysen WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Scientists and ethicists gathered at an international summit in Washington said it would be "irresponsible" to use gene editing technology in human embryos for therapeutic purposes, such as to correct genetic diseases, until safety and efficacy issues are resolved. The statement on Thursday comes amid a growing debate over the use of powerful new gene editing tools in human eggs, sperm and embryos, which have the power to change the DNA of unborn children. The group's guidance follows calls for various bans on use of the technology known as CRISPR-Cas9, which has quickly become the preferred method of gene editing in research labs because of its ease of use compared with older techniques. Read More »Risk of Stillbirth Raised by Weight Gain Between Pregnancies Weight gain between pregnancies may increase the risk of stillbirth or infant death, a new study from Sweden suggests. The researchers analyzed information from more than 450,000 women who had two pregnancies between 1992 and 2012. Women whose body mass index (BMI) increased by more than 4 points between pregnancies were about 50 percent more likely to have stillbirths in their second pregnancies than women whose weight was stable between pregnancies. Read More »Too Much TV Really Is Bad for Your Brain The people in the study who watched more than 3 hours of TV per day on average over the next 25 years were more likely to perform poorly on certain cognitive tests, compared with people who watched little TV, the researchers found. The results suggest that engaging in physical activity, as opposed to sitting and watching TV, is important for brain health, said study author Tina D. Hoang, of the Northern California Institute for Research and Education at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in San Francisco. In the study, the researchers asked the participants every five years how many hours per day they spent watching TV on average during the past year. Read More »China issues rules banning dishonesty in science publishing BEIJING (AP) — Chinese regulators overseeing the field of academic publishing for scientific articles have rules explicitly banning dishonest practices. Read More »Hawaii court revokes permit for telescope project on volcano (Story corrects Thursday to Wednesday in paragraph 5) By Suzannah Gonzales (Reuters) - The Hawaii Supreme Court on Wednesday revoked a permit that would have allowed the controversial construction of one of the world's largest telescopes on a dormant volcano considered an ideal location on Earth to view the stars. Issuing the permit to construct a 180-foot high, $1.4 billion astronomical observatory on the Mauna Kea volcano on Hawaii's Big Island did not comply with case law, statutes or the state constitution, court documents showed. In November, the court temporarily blocked construction of the telescope, a collaboration between China, India, Canada, Japan and the United States, after a challenge by Native Hawaiians and environmentalists who said the project would damage sacred lands. Read More »How Stupid Can You Be? Science Counts the Ways Forrest Gump once said, "Stupid is as stupid does." Turns out, he was right. Read More »'Spooky Action at a Distance' Author George Musser Talks Physics Loopholes Read More » New Type of Carbon Is Harder and Brighter Than Diamonds "This new phase is very unique," said study co-author Jagdish Narayan, a materials scientist at North Carolina State University. In this subterranean pressure cooker, carbon dioxide molecules were crushed with pressures of about 725,000 lbs. per square inch (5 million kilopascals) and heated to a sweltering 2,200 degrees Fahrenheit (1,200 degrees Celsius), according to a 2012 study in the journal Nature. Read More »Leonardo da Vinci robot wows Tokyo crowd The International Robot Exhibition 2015 (iREX) opened its doors to the public on Wednesday (December 2) at the Tokyo Big Sight center for five days of displays and seminars on the latest robot technology. Attracting much attention were disaster response robots created by Japan's NEDO (New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization). "Most of our jobs, of course, are for human beings, and so we think humanoids can handle these kinds of things," explained Satoshi Kochiyama, Project Manager in the Machine Systems Department. Read More »Lightest Metal Ever Is 99.9 Percent Air Read More » Map of World's Groundwater Shows Planet's 'Hidden' Reservoirs Read More » Biblical King's Royal Seal Unearthed Near Temple Mount Read More » | ||||
| ||||
|