Thursday, May 23, 2013

Hubble Reveals the Ring Nebula’s True Shape

The Ring Nebula's distinctive shape makes it a popular illustration for astronomy books. But new observations by NASA's Hubble Space Telescope of the glowing gas shroud around an old, dying, sun-like star reveal a new twist. ...  > full story
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Flat Spray-on Optical Lens Created

Engineers have made a breakthrough utilizing spray-on technology that could revolutionize the way optical lenses are made and used. ...  > full story
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The Secret Lives (and Deaths) of Neurons

Researchers have uncovered surprising insights about how nerve cells rewire themselves, shedding light on a process linked with neurodegenerative diseases and neurodevelopmental disorders like schizophrenia and autism. ...  > full story
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Depression Linked to Telomere Enzyme, Aging, Chronic Disease

The first symptoms of major depression may be behavioral, but the common mental illness is based in biology — and not limited to the brain, new research suggests. ...  > full story
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Ants and Carnivorous Plants Conspire for Mutualistic Feeding

An insect-eating pitcher plant teams up with ants to prevent mosquito larvae from stealing its nutrients, according to new research. ...  > full story
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Top 10 New Species of 2012

An amazing glow-in-the-dark cockroach, a harp-shaped carnivorous sponge and the smallest vertebrate on Earth are just three of the newly discovered top 10 species selected by a global committee of taxonomists. ...  > full story
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Brain Can Be Trained in Compassion, Study Shows

A new study shows that adults can be trained to be more compassionate. The report investigates whether training adults in compassion can result in greater altruistic behavior and related changes in neural systems underlying compassion. ...  > full story
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Tests Lead to Doubling of Fuel Cell Life

Researchers working to improve durability in fuel cell powered buses have discovered links between electrode degradation processes and bus membrane durability. The team is quantifying the effects of electrode degradation stressors in ...  > full story
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Magnetic Field Misbehavior in Solar Flares Explained: The Culprit Is Turbulence

When a solar flare erupts from the sun, its magnetic fields sometime break a widely accepted rule of physics. Why? Now we know. ...  > full story
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Innovation Could Bring Flexible Solar Cells, Transistors, Displays

Researchers have created a new type of transparent electrode that might find uses in solar cells, flexible displays for computers and consumer electronics and future "optoelectronic" circuits for sensors and information ...  > full story
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Mosquito Behavior May Be Immune Response, Not Parasite Manipulation

Malaria-carrying mosquitoes appear to be manipulated by the parasites they carry, but this manipulation may simply be part of the mosquitoes' immune response, according to entomologists. ...  > full story
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Promising New Approach to Treatment of Lung Cancer

Researchers have developed a new drug delivery system that allows inhalation of chemotherapeutic drugs to help treat lung cancer, and in laboratory and animal tests it appears to reduce the systemic damage done to other organs while significantly improving the ...  > full story
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Top Medical News


Regenerating Spinal Cord Fibers May Be Treatment for Stroke-Related Disabilities

A new study finds "substantial evidence" that a regenerative process involving damaged nerve fibers in the spinal cord could hold the key to better functional recovery by most stroke victims. The findings may offer new hope to those who suffer ...  > full story

Top Technology News


Stitching Defects Into World’s Thinnest Semiconductor

Researchers have grown high-quality crystals of molybdenum disulfide, the world's thinnest semiconductor, and studied how these crystals stitch together at the atomic scale to form continuous sheets, gaining key insights into the optical and ...  > full story

Top Environment News


What the Smallest Infectious Agents Reveal About Evolution

Radically different viruses share genes and are likely to share ancestry, according to new research. The comprehensive phylogenomic analysis compares giant viruses that infect amoeba with tiny viruses known as virophages and to several groups of ...  > full story

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Bacterium Uses Natural 'Thermometer' to Trigger Diarrheal Disease, Scientists Find

How does the bacterium Shigella -- the cause of a deadly diarrheal disease -- detect that it's in a human host? Scientists have found that a biological "RNA thermometer" monitors whether the environment is right for the bacterium to produce the ...  > full story

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Computers & Math

Whirlpools on the Nanoscale Could Multiply Magnetic Memory

Scientists are developing four-bit magnetic cells instead of the two-bit magnetic domains of standard magnetic memories. Magnetic vortices are whirlpools of magnetic field, in which electron spins point either clockwise or counterclockwise. In the ...  > full story

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Thirsty Plants Text For Help

Interactive telecommunications researchers designed a soil-moisture sensor device that can allow a house plant to communicate with its owner. The. ...  > full story

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