People preaching their point of view seem awfully sure of themselves. [More]
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Feed SubscriptionHouseplants Make You Smarter
You are probably aware that eating plants is good for you. However, what you may not know is that plants can provide benefits even if your taste buds run for cover at the first mention of spinach. New research is beginning to show that just having plants in your workspace may improve how you think.
Read More »The worst nuclear plant accident in history: Live from Chernobyl
CHERNOBYL, Ukraine--The face-mask and three radiation monitors I'm wearing here are grim reminders that I'm at the site of the worst nuclear accident in history. On April 26, 1986, 1:23:44 a.m. local time, explosions destroyed reactor No.
Read More »Partial Meltdowns Led to Hydrogen Explosions at Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant
Just after 6 AM local time on Tuesday in Japan, a sound like an explosion was heard near the suppression pool of reactor No. 2 at the stricken Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. This followed an explosion March 11 that ripped the roof off reactor No
Read More »Fast Facts about the Japan Earthquake and Tsunami
Why was Japan's March 11 earthquake so big? One answer is the large size of the fault rupture as well as the speed at which the Pacific Plate is continuously thrusting beneath Japan, U.S. Geological Survey (U.S.G.S.) scientist Tom Brocher told KQED News.
Read More »Friendly Bacteria Fight the Flu
By Amy Maxmen Helpful bacteria don't just aid digestion; they also fend off the flu, according to a report published March 14 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. A research team led by Akiko Iwasaki, an immunologist at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut, found that mice treated with neomycin antibiotics were more susceptible than control mice to influenza viruses.
Read More »Japan’s nuclear crisis and tsunami recovery via Twitter and other Web resources
Conditions are changing rapidly at the Fukushima power plant, where at least two of its six nuclear reactors have partially melted down. The editors of Scientific American are following the developments, and part of the effort involves following various Twitter users.
Read More »New Solutions for Clean Energy
As the world continues to grapple with energy-related pollution and poverty, can innovation help? [More]
Read More »Nuclear Accident Is Long-Feared "Station Blackout"
“The type of accident that is occurring in Japan is known as the station blackout: loss of off-site AC power--power lines are down--and then a subsequent failure of emergency power on-site, the diesel generators. The station blackout has been one of the great concerns for decades.” Physicist Ken Bergeron, speaking on March 12 during a press briefing. He worked on nuclear reactor accident analysis at Sandia National Laboratories.
Read More »A Little Help from Their Friends
Physician Assistants Number in 2008: 74,800 [More]
Read More »Inventing the Future of Energy: A Q&A with ARPA-e’s Arun Majumdar
NATIONAL HARBOR, Md.--Every day the U.S. imports $1 billion worth of oil.
Read More »MESSENGER Spacecraft Maps Mercury’s Rugged Terrain [Interactive]
By Ed Bell and Phil Saunders [More]
Read More »Japan says Onagawa radioactive level now normal-IAEA
(Adds quotes, background) VIENNA, March 13 (Reuters) - Japanese authorities have told [More]
Read More »U.S. issues travel warning for Japan
* Temporary shortages of water and food * Evacuation of area near damaged nuclear reactors [More]
Read More »The Complex Origins of Food Safety RulesYes, You Are Overcooking Your Food
Editor's note: The following is an edited excerpt from a chapter in Modernist Cuisine: The Art and Science of Cooking (The Cooking Lab, 2011), a six-volume set consisting of 2,348 pages of text and photography. Scientific research on foodborne pathogens provides the foundation for all food safety rules.
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