The death of Osama bin Laden on Sunday, after more than a decade of pursuit, is a huge symbolic victory for U.S.
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Feed SubscriptionBeing Overweight in Midlife Might Increase Chance of Dementia Later
Obesity and dementia have a well-established connection in the medical literature. But a new study shows that just being overweight--with a BMI of 25 or above--in middle age might also significantly increase the odds that a person develops dementia later in life. [More]
Read More »Nuclear waste storage a top issue for NRC
By Roberta Rampton WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. nuclear safety regulator is studying whether to require plants to more quickly move radioactive waste out of pools as part of a review on safety in the wake of Japan's nuclear disaster, its chairman said on Monday. [More]
Read More »Off the Grid: A High Tech Military Deployed the Ancient Art of Stealth to Capture Their Man
They could have used grappling hooks and longbows. The hunting down of Global Enemy No
Read More »Boosting Solar Cell Efficiency by Minimizing Defects
A new advance in solar cells that tips the surface with minuscule cone structures could neutralize manufacturing defects, boosting efficiency up to 80 percent. In conventional solar panels, more than 50 percent of the charges generated by sunlight are lost due to defects, said Jun Xu, a researcher at the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory. The irregularities in the formation of the crystalline structure of solar cells can trap electrons and limit the transfer of sunlight to electrical energy.
Read More »How Do You ID a Dead Osama?
Osama Bin Laden is dead . At least, that's what we've been told, and I tend to believe such things. But how do they know it's him
Read More »How Does a Floating Plastic Duckie End Up Where It Does?
In Moby Duck , Donovan Hohn tracks the fate of 28,000 plastic bath toys (“rubber” ducks, frogs, turtles and beavers) across the Northwest Coast to their origins in China and even through the North West Passage. But how did these bath toys come to be spread on the shores of Alaska, Washington, Hawaii and Russia? On January 10th 1992, the Ever Laurel, a large container cargo ship, was caught in a storm in the North Pacific with severe waves rolling her from side to side.
Read More »A True Duck Hunt: interview with Donovan Hohn
For the author of Moby-Duck , Donovan Hohn , it all started with a school assignment. In 2008, he challenged his journalism class to find the "archaeology of the ordinary." A student, known to be a bit of an odd one, wrote his assignment on his lucky rubber duck.
Read More »Comet Bops Past Neptune Cleanly
If the solar system were a Peanuts cartoon, the role of Pigpen would be played by a comet.
Read More »Polyglots Might Have Multiple Personalities
If you speak multiple languages, you might have multiple personalities.
Read More »Kids Learn Better When You Bring Science Home
We learned all kinds of things from our parents--manners, safety, housekeeping, how to make a cake, how to pump our legs to make ourselves go high on a swing and where to find crayfish in a creek. As they showed us how to reach these small successes in our daily life, they also taught us science knowledge--even though they may not have known a lot about psychology, physiology, chemistry, physics or animal adaptation. In learning by doing, young children get support for their later formal education: they build a set of experiences that they can recall and relate to new information in middle school science classes and beyond.
Read More »Too Hard For Science? Recreating What Killed Pompeii
Even if one was allowed to make a volcano explode, creating the flows of interest looks impossible In "Too Hard for Science?" I interview scientists about ideas they would love to explore that they don't think could be investigated. For instance, they might involve machines beyond the realm of possibility, such as particle accelerators as big as the sun, or they might be completely unethical, such as lethal experiments involving people.
Read More »NatureMapping
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Read More »It’s a Solid… It’s a Liquid… It’s Oobleck!
Key concepts Liquids and solids [More]
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