Astronomers are probably just a few years from the first-ever finding of an Earth twin outside our solar system, that is, a planet roughly the size of Earth orbiting at a similarly temperate distance from a sun-like star.
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Feed SubscriptionScientists want politics kept out of endangered species decisions
Some 1,293 scientists sent a letter ( pdf ) this week to each and every U.S.
Read More »The Geoid: Why a map of Earth’s gravity yields a potato-shaped planet
This video is no April's fool joke: Earth really is shaped like a potato. However, the shape that you see here is, um, slightly exaggerated to highlight its irregularities.
Read More »Smart Thermostats Outwit Users
Programmable thermostats, which now make up about half the U.S. sales of all thermostats, could be more trouble for some than they're worth
Read More »Patent Watch: "StunRay" Disables with a Flash of Light
Incapacitating light beam: The suspect is going for his gun, and the police officer doesn’t want to shoot. The founders of a company called Genesis Illumination hope police officers will soon be reaching for a StunRay instead of a gun or Taser.
Read More »MIND Reviews: The Belief Instinct
The Belief Instinct by Jesse Bering.
Read More »Bitter Blocker Beats Broccoli
They say you should take the bitter with the sweet. But if you’re not a big fan of bitter, chemists have just the loophole for you
Read More »Computer restoraton of juvenile art, by Ricardo Chiav’inglese
Back in 1995, a few of the editors at Scientific American decided to resurrect a tradition of a previous generation of editors, who saw fit to publish a joke column in each April issue. This particular April Fools piece came to be with a little luck: back then. as the editor of the Amateur Scientist column, I use to look for projects that gave some hands-on insight to one of the feature articles in the same issue
Read More »Antibiotic Resistance Is Taking Out "Last-Resort" Drugs Used to Combat Worrisome Category of Germs
There are so many news stories about antibiotic resistance these days that you may be tempted to ignore them all just to preserve your sanity. But there is a kind of hierarchy of danger when it comes to figuring out which stories are most deserving of your attention
Read More »Recommended: A World without Fish
World without Fish by Mark Kurlansky. Illustrated by Frank Stockton.
Read More »Can Rob Kalin Scale Etsy?
In a hip loft, in the hippest borough of the hippest city in America, a hundred or so energetic young people wearing vintage dresses, modded Nikes, and skinny jeans turn to face a makeshift stage. This is Greenpoint, Brooklyn, where a selection of creative types have congregated on a Friday night in January to enjoy free beer and celebrate the opening of the neighborhood's newest clothing store, Ruffeo Hearts Lil Snotty.
Read More »The Japan Nuclear Crisis: What You Need to Know
For a complete list of our coverage, see our In-Depth Report " The Japan Earthquake, Tsunami and Nuclear Crisis "
Read More »Jesting Our Limits: Do April Fools’ Day Pranks Alienate or Engage People?
Cellophane over the toilet bowl. Decaf coffee in the "regular" carafe.
Read More »A New Wrinkle: Comet Strikes in the 1980s and 1990s Left Ripples in Jupiter’s and Saturn’s Rings
Something is disturbing the famed, majestic rings of Saturn as well as the lesser-known rings around Jupiter. The ring systems, which appear at first glance to be planar, wafer-thin bands of ice and dust, have on closer examination been found to be rippled, like a corrugated tin roof.
Read More »Saving bats could prevent huge U.S. farming losses
By Kate Kelland LONDON (Reuters) - America's bats are dying in their hundreds of thousands due to a mysterious illness called white-nose syndrome, and efforts to save them could prevent billions of dollars in agricultural losses, scientists say. [More]
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