News

NASA image of Tropical Storm Daphne
Apr 04, 2012 06:44 AM EDT

NASA Infrared Image Sees a Stronger Tropical Storm Daphne

Tropical Storm Daphne strengthened overnight and was captured in an infrared image from NASA's Terra satellite. Daphne moved away from the Fiji islands and remains north of New Zealand in the South Pacific on April 3, 2012.

Tropical forrest
Apr 04, 2012 06:40 AM EDT

What Can Hollywood Teach Us about Our Planet?

Plants have a lot to teach us about how our planet works. Further, movies like the blockbuster film Avatar, in which plants play an important role, can inspire us to pay closer attention to them. What are some lessons that the movies can teach us about our planet's vegetation?

Entomology
Apr 04, 2012 06:30 AM EDT

Entomology 2012 to Present 105 Insect Symposia in November

Entomology 2012, the 60th Annual Meeting of the Entomological Society of America (ESA), will feature 105 symposia on insects and related arthropods, November 11-14, 2012 in Knoxville, TN.

Nanoscale Magnetic Media Diagnostics by Rippling Spin Waves
Apr 04, 2012 06:25 AM EDT

Nanoscale Magnetic Media Diagnostics by Rippling Spin Waves

Memory devices based on magnetism are one of the core technologies of the computing industry, and engineers are working to develop new forms of magnetic memory that are faster, smaller, and more energy efficient than today's flash and SDRAM memory. They now have a new tool developed by a team from t...

Algae
Apr 04, 2012 06:12 AM EDT

Algae Biofuels: the Wave of the Future

Researchers at Virginia Bioinformatics Institute at Virginia Tech have assembled the draft genome of a marine algae sequence to aid scientists across the US in a project that aims to discover the best algae species for producing biodiesel fuel. The results have been published in Nature Communication...

Epilepsy Implant
Apr 04, 2012 06:03 AM EDT

Early Warning System for Seizures Could Cut False Alarms

Epilepsy affects 50 million people worldwide, but in a third of these cases, medication cannot keep seizures from occurring. One solution is to shoot a short pulse of electricity to the brain to stamp out the seizure just as it begins to erupt.

Human genome
Apr 03, 2012 02:57 PM EDT

Darwin in the Genome

A current controversy raging in evolutionary biology is whether adaptation to new environments is the result of many genes, each of relatively small effect, or just a few genes of large effect. A new study published in Molecular Ecology strongly supports the first "many-small" hypothesis.

IBM
Apr 03, 2012 02:42 PM EDT

Rice University, IBM Partner to Bring First Blue Gene Supercomputer to Texas

Rice University and IBM today announced a partnership to build the first award-winning IBM Blue Gene supercomputer in Texas. Rice also announced a related collaboration agreement with the University of Sao Paulo (USP) in Brazil to initiate the shared administration and use of the Blue Gene supercomp...

Solar system
Apr 03, 2012 02:37 PM EDT

New Isotope Measurement Could Alter History of Early Solar System

The early days of our solar system might look quite different than previously thought, according to research at the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory published in Science. The study used more sensitive instruments to find a different half-life for samarium, one of the iso...

Neutrophil
Apr 03, 2012 02:23 PM EDT

New Immune Defense Enzyme Discovered

Neutrophil granulocytes comprise important defences for the immune system. When pathogenic bacteria penetrate the body, they are the first on the scene to mobilise other immune cells via signal molecules, thereby containing the risk. To this end, they release serine proteases - enzymes that cut up o...

Children
Apr 03, 2012 02:10 PM EDT

Bilingual Children Switch Tasks Faster Than Speakers of a Single Language

Children who grow up learning to speak two languages are better at switching between tasks than are children who learn to speak only one language, according to a study funded in part by the National Institutes of Health. However, the study also found that bilinguals are slower to acquire vocabulary ...

Sun
Apr 03, 2012 01:56 PM EDT

Can a Ray of Sunshine Help the Critically Ill?

Scientists have long believed that vitamin D, which is naturally absorbed from sunlight, has an important role in the functioning of the body's autoimmune system. Now Prof. Howard Amital of Tel Aviv University's Sackler Faculty of Medicine and Sheba Medical Center has discovered that the vitamin may...

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