The future is here: Interactive screens on your packages
Scientists develop new way of attaching electronic screens to paper-based packaging Screens can display simple messages to customers Development could revolutionize packaging industry worth billions of dollars
Restoring ecosystems -- how to learn from our mistakes
In a joint North European and North American study led by Umeå
researcher Christer Nilsson, a warning is issued of underdocumented
results of ecological restorations. The researchers show that continuous...
Quantum dots enhance light-to-current conversion in layered semiconductors
Harnessing the power of the sun and creating light-harvesting or
light-sensing devices requires a material that both absorbs light
efficiently and converts the energy to highly mobile electrical
current. Finding...
Behemoth black hole found in an unlikely place
Astronomers have uncovered a near-record breaking supermassive
black hole, weighing 17 billion suns, in an unlikely place: in the
center of a galaxy in a sparsely populated area of the...
UC Berkeley, Stanford find LA LGBT Center's canvassing conversations reduce transphobia
Researchers from Stanford University and the University of California, Berkeley, report in today's edition of Science that volunteer canvassers - both transgender and not - reduced voters' prejudice against transgender...
Neanderthal Y chromosome offers clues to what kept us separate species
Researchers reporting in the American Journal of Human Genetics, published by Cell Press, have completed the first in-depth genetic analysis of a Neanderthal Y chromosome. The findings offer new insights...
ORNL neutron 'splashes' reveal signature of exotic particles
Researchers at the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National
Laboratory used neutrons to uncover novel behavior in materials
that holds promise for quantum computing. The findings, published
in Nature Materials,...
News: Report shows how to say goodbye to harmful algal blooms
Harmful algal blooms dangerous to human health and the Lake Erie
ecosystem--such as the one that shut down Toledo's water supply for
two days in 2014--could become a problem of...
HIV can develop resistance to CRISPR/Cas9
The CRISPR/Cas9 gene-editing platform may need a little bit more
tweaking before it can be used as an effective antiviral, reports a
study published April 7 in Cell Reports. Researchers...
Scientists invent robotic 'artist' that spray paints giant murals
Robots do many things formerly done only by humans - from
bartending and farming to driving cars - but a Dartmouth researcher
and his colleagues have invented a "smart" paint...
No more broken hearts
A team of the Lomonosov Moscow State University scientists
investigated the genetic mechanisms underlying the development of
the coronary atherosclerosis. The obtained results are potentially
valuable for estimating the risk...
New models predicting where to find fossils
An international team of scientists have developed a way to help locate fossils of long-extinct animals.
Physicists discover flaws in superconductor theory
University of Houston physicists report finding major theoretical
flaws in the generally accepted understanding of how a
superconductor traps and holds a magnetic field. More than 50 years
ago, C.P....
Climate models underestimate global warming by exaggerating cloud brightening
Researchers at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and Yale University have found that climate models are aggressively making clouds "brighter" as the planet warms. This may be causing models to underestimate...
Clearing the way for real-world applications of superhydrophobic surfaces
In their perspective article in the journal Science, researchers from Aalto University call for consistent and standardized testing of superhydrophobic, i.e. extremely water-repellent, materials.
Astrophysicists find triple star system with 'hot Jupiter'
Crisp, clear images of a "hot Jupiter" system captured by a University of Notre Dame physicist were vital in determining that a newly found planet inhabits a three-star system, a...
Function of mysterious RNAs may often lie in their genes
A new genetic clue discovered by a team co-led by a researcher at
the Perelman
School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania is shedding...
These trap-jaw spiders strike their prey with lightning speed
Mecysmaucheniidae spiders, which live only in New Zealand and
southern South America, don't look like much. They are drab and
tiny spiders that hunt for prey on the ground. But...
Spending that fits personality can boost well-being
Money could buy happiness if your purchases fit your personality, according to a new study that examines nearly 77,000 actual UK bank spending transactions.
Primate evolution in the fast lane
The pace of evolution is typically measured in millions of years, as random, individual mutations accumulate over generations, but researchers at Cornell and Bar-Ilan Universities have uncovered a new mechanism...
New predictive tool for assessing breast cancer risk
Harvard Stem Cell Institute (HSCI) researchers at Dana-Farber
Cancer Institute (DFCI) and collaborators at Brigham and Women's
Hospital (BWH) have identified a molecular marker in normal breast
tissue that can...
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Get the latest and most popular science news articles of the week in your Inbox! It's free!Breaking science news from the newsfeed
- SpaceX Resuming Deliveries to International Space Station
- Climate Change Is Moving the North Pole
- NASA: Global warming is now changing how Earth wobbles
- Debate Erupts over Strange New Human Species
- Optical tweezers extract biomolecule folding secrets
- What Might the Putative 'Planet Nine' Look Like?
- Laureates call for cut to highly enriched uranium
- DuPont shutters US plant where leak killed four workers
- Kepler's New Mission: To Hunt Strange Orphan Worlds
- Mysterious Gravitational Tug on Saturn May Help Find Planet Nine
- Milky Way Mystery: Here's What Caused the Galaxy's Youngest Supernova
- SpaceX delivers inflatable room, supplies to space station
- Gilead buys Nimbus’s NASH portfolio
- Californian hazard warning website criticised
- Neat Freak Rattlesnakes and Other Animals That Tidy Up
- DNA May Hold Clues to Halt Westward Spread of Bat Mystery Disease
- Hacking an Enzyme's Structure Could Lead to Drugs for Alzheimer's and Schizophrenia
- Warning for investors, not just environmentalists, in fossil fuel spending: Don Pittis
- Ethiopia Battles Worst Drought in Decades
- Team identifies clathrate ices in comet 67P
- Acetaminophen may affect ability to spot errors, study says
- Changing monsoon patterns, more rain contribute to lower tea yield in Chinese provinces
- Intracellular recordings using nanotower electrodes
- How an ancient civilization conserved water
- Yeast Infection Led to Removal of Transplanted Uterus
- AMOR, a love potion for plant fertilization
- Switching specific G-protein-coupled signalling pathways on and off
- What really happened on Easter Island?
Popular science news articles
- Shorter, intensive radiation can be recommended in early prostate cancer
- Common prostate cancer treatments suppress immune response and may promote relapse
- Astrophysicists find triple star system with 'hot Jupiter'
- New models predicting where to find fossils
- Restoring ecosystems -- how to learn from our mistakes
- A new approach to sequence and assemble primate genomes
- New cause of exceptional Greenland melt revealed
- Size matters: NASA measures raindrop sizes from space to understand storms
- Black, Latino families urged to emphasize college graduation rates in enrollment decisions
- Number of science and engineering graduate students up in 2014
Astronomy & Space
- Supernovae showered Earth with radioactive debris
- NASAs New Horizons fills gap in space environment observations
- Multitasking New Horizons observed solar wind changes on journey to Pluto
- NASA's GPM satellite examines tornadic thunderstorms
- Size matters: NASA measures raindrop sizes from space to understand storms
Biology & Nature
- African wars endanger world's largest gorilla subspecies
- Trophoblasts resistant to Zika/Zika in the mouse
- Penn study brings new understanding to how fundamental DNA sequences govern gene activity
- Duke study uncovers genetic elements that drive regeneration
- Marine reserves are critical for coral reef resilience
Health & Medicine
- New survey on American attitudes toward Zika virus finds limited awareness or concern
- New mouse model to aid testing of Zika vaccine, therapeutics
- Common prostate cancer treatments suppress immune response and may promote relapse
- Shorter, intensive radiation can be recommended in early prostate cancer
- The Lancet: Number of adults with diabetes reaches 422 million worldwide
Mathematics & Economics
- Existing state laws collectively require a 50 percent increase in US renewable electricity
- How network effects hurt economies
- NREL raises rooftop photovoltaic technical potential estimate
- Number of science and engineering graduate students up in 2014
- Study: State-level public corruption affects firm value, transparency
Physics & Chemistry
- Advance may make quantum computing more practical
- Changing the color of single photons in a diamond quantum memory
- PPPL scientists help test innovative device to improve efficiency of tokamaks
- Engineers develop a pill for long-term drug release
- Plastic proteins: Synthetic material mimics essential characteristics of natural proteins








