ScienceDaily: Top Science News |
- Graphene sieve turns seawater into drinking water
- Prehistoric art and ornaments from Indonesian 'Ice Age'
- Android apps can conspire to mine information from your smartphone
- Monkey business produces rare preserved blood in amber fossils
- Electronic synapses that can learn: Towards an artificial brain?
- New indications of gradual decline of dinosaurs before the end of the cretaceous period
- Mutant lifestyles: Researchers uncover a potent genetic element in Earth's smallest life forms
- Spray-on memory could enable bendable digital storage
- Man moves paralyzed legs using device that stimulates spinal cord
- Stretching the boundaries of neural implants
- Surprise discovery of Europe's first cave fish
- Magnetic brain stimulation causes weight loss by making gut bacteria healthier
- Nanoscopic golden springs change color of twisted light
- How melanoma tumors form
- Early life antibiotic use linked to inflammatory gut diseases in adulthood
- Babies cry most in UK, Canada, Italy, Netherlands
- Harms of nighttime light exposure passed to offspring
- Is it a boy or is it a girl? New method to ID baby sea turtles' sex
- Shadow of agas cloud detected in an ancient proto-supercluster
| Graphene sieve turns seawater into drinking water Posted: 03 Apr 2017 04:31 PM PDT |
| Prehistoric art and ornaments from Indonesian 'Ice Age' Posted: 03 Apr 2017 12:11 PM PDT |
| Android apps can conspire to mine information from your smartphone Posted: 03 Apr 2017 12:11 PM PDT Mobile phones have increasingly become the repository for the details that drive our everyday lives. But researchers have recently discovered that the same apps we regularly use on our phones to organize lunch dates, make convenient online purchases, and communicate the most intimate details of our existence have secretly been colluding to mine our information. |
| Monkey business produces rare preserved blood in amber fossils Posted: 03 Apr 2017 12:11 PM PDT |
| Electronic synapses that can learn: Towards an artificial brain? Posted: 03 Apr 2017 11:02 AM PDT |
| New indications of gradual decline of dinosaurs before the end of the cretaceous period Posted: 03 Apr 2017 10:59 AM PDT The gradual decline of the dinosaurs and pterosaurs presumably came before the impact of the Chicxulub asteroid and the global mass extinction at the end of the Cretaceous Period, new research suggests. Studies also indicate that bird species spread and diversified at the same time the dinosaurs disappeared. |
| Mutant lifestyles: Researchers uncover a potent genetic element in Earth's smallest life forms Posted: 03 Apr 2017 10:55 AM PDT |
| Spray-on memory could enable bendable digital storage Posted: 03 Apr 2017 10:54 AM PDT Researchers have created a new 'spray-on' digital memory using only an aerosol jet printer and nanoparticle ink. The device, which is analogous to a 4-bit flash drive, is the first fully-printed digital memory suitable for practical use in simple electronics such as environmental sensors or RFID tags. Because it is jet-printed, it could be used to build programmable electronic devices on flexible materials like paper, plastic or fabric. |
| Man moves paralyzed legs using device that stimulates spinal cord Posted: 03 Apr 2017 09:36 AM PDT |
| Stretching the boundaries of neural implants Posted: 03 Apr 2017 09:35 AM PDT |
| Surprise discovery of Europe's first cave fish Posted: 03 Apr 2017 09:35 AM PDT |
| Magnetic brain stimulation causes weight loss by making gut bacteria healthier Posted: 03 Apr 2017 09:35 AM PDT |
| Nanoscopic golden springs change color of twisted light Posted: 03 Apr 2017 09:35 AM PDT |
| Posted: 03 Apr 2017 09:33 AM PDT |
| Early life antibiotic use linked to inflammatory gut diseases in adulthood Posted: 03 Apr 2017 09:33 AM PDT |
| Babies cry most in UK, Canada, Italy, Netherlands Posted: 03 Apr 2017 05:30 AM PDT Psychologists have created world's first universal charts for normal amount of crying in babies during first three months. On average, babies around the world cry for around 2 hours per day in first two weeks, peak at 2 hours 15 mins at six weeks -- and crying reduces to 1 hour 10 minutes by week twelve. Their study found that babies cry more in Britain, Canada and Italy, than the rest of the world, according to new research. In Denmark, Germany and Japan, parents deal with the least amount of crying and fussing. |
| Harms of nighttime light exposure passed to offspring Posted: 31 Mar 2017 09:03 AM PDT |
| Is it a boy or is it a girl? New method to ID baby sea turtles' sex Posted: 30 Mar 2017 06:28 AM PDT Is it a boy or is it a girl? For baby sea turtles it's not that cut and dry. Because they don't have an X or Y chromosome, baby sea turtles' sex is defined during development by the incubation environment. Warmer sand temperatures produce more females and cooler sand temperatures produce more males. A crucial step in the conservation of these animals is estimating hatchling sex ratios, which remains imprecise because of their anatomical makeup. |
| Shadow of agas cloud detected in an ancient proto-supercluster Posted: 29 Mar 2017 07:37 AM PDT The Suprime-Cam on the Subaru Telescope has been used to create the most-extensive map of neutral hydrogen gas in the early universe. This cloud appears widely spread out across 160 million light-years in and around a structure called the proto-supercluster. It is the largest structure in the distant universe, and existed some 11.5 billion years ago. Such a huge gas cloud is extremely valuable for studying large-scale structure formation and the evolution of galaxies from gas in the early universe, and merits further investigation. |
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