The Apple co-founder passed away October 5, but our digital lives leaped ahead dramatically as a result of his leadership [More]
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Feed SubscriptionBench or Bedside? A Conversation with Ferid Murad
Camelia-Lucia Cimpianu, an early-career scientist who attended the Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting this summer in Germany, is trying to decide between a career as a researcher or a practising doctor. In this film, she seeks advice from Nobel Laureate Ferid Murad who faced the same dilemma as a medical student in the 1960s. Murad chose the bench, and he subsequently discovered that nitric oxide acts as a signalling molecule in the cardiovascular system.
Read More »EPA Easing Air Quality Rule for Power Plants
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Environmental Protection Agency is expected to ease a new air pollution rule that would require power plants in 27 states to slash emissions, The Wall Street Journal reported on Tuesday, citing people familiar with the matter. The EPA plans to propose as early as this week allowing certain states and companies to emit more pollutants than it previously permitted, the report said.
Read More »Conjoined Comet: Hartley 2 May Have Formed from 2 Disparate Bodies
NANTES, France--The shape of Comet Hartley 2 has inspired a number of colorful descriptors--it's been called a pickle, a peanut, a dog bone and a bowling pin. [More]
Read More »Why Conservative White Males Are More Likely to Be Climate Skeptics
When it comes to climate change denial, not all human beings are created equal. As a recent study shows, conservative white males are less likely to believe in climate change
Read More »Drone On: Will the FAA Open U.S. Skies to Unmanned Aircraft?
Drone strikes have proved an effective, if controversial, weapon in the hunt for al Qaeda operatives in the Middle East and beyond . The use of such unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) domestically for civilian jobs such as U.S. border patrol, weather research, pipeline inspection or even real estate photography has lagged, however, because of a cumbersome Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) case-based approval process.
Read More »Poachers Wiping Out Rare Monkey in Tanzania
An endangered Old World monkey species found in only two sites in Tanzania is in danger of being poached and eaten into extinction, researchers from the Tanzania Forest Conservation Group (TFCG) and Udzungwa Ecological Monitoring Center reported last week. The Sanje mangabey ( Cercocebus sanjei ) lives only in the Mwanihana Forest and the Udzungwa Scarp Forest Reserve on the eastern slopes of Tanzania’s Udzungwa Mountains.
Read More »How Skulls Speak (preview)
Like the detectives on the CBS drama Cold Case , anthropologist Ann H. Ross of North Carolina State University spends many of her days thinking about unsolved crimes. Her most recent work has aimed at developing software that helps forensic scientists determine the sex and ancestry of modern
Read More »How Skulls Speak Web Exclusive
Looking for the Web Exclusive mentioned in the October 2011 issue of Scientific American ?
Read More »The 2011 Nobel Prize in Chemistry Honors Discoverer of Quasicrystals
The 2011 Nobel Prize in chemistry was awarded today to Daniel Schechtman of the Technion--Israel Institute of Technology in Haifa.
Read More »Great Lakes Face Stresses from Run-Off, Invaders
By Andrew Stern CHICAGO (Reuters) - Great Lakes shorelines are becoming clogged by algae blooms fed by agricultural run-off, while invasive mussels decimate the food chain in deeper waters, an environmental group said on Tuesday. [More]
Read More »Sewage Is Virus Goldmine
Sewage. We know it's filled with germs that can make us sick, which is why we try to keep it far away from food and water supplies
Read More »Carbon-Capture-and-Storage Projects Make "Measured Progress"
Despite a string of funding challenges in the past year, the picture is not bleak for the carbon capture and sequestration industry. That message is in a new report being released this morning from the Global CCS Institute, an Australia-based organization that studies the industry
Read More »Nikon Announces Winners of 2011 Small World Competition
1st place winner: Portrait of a green lacewing larva (20X) by the inimitable Igor Siwanowicz While science journalists’ attention remains focused on the Nobel prizes, another set of awards- rather diminutive in scope- were also released this morning. [More]
Read More »Nobel Dreams: 2011 Physics Prize Honors Accelerating Universe
A few years ago, soon after moving to Los Angeles, an old grad school buddy of the Time Lord came to town, Brian Schmidt, and we took him to a nearby tapas eatery for nibbles and pisco sours. I remember they were shooting a scene from a Will Smith movie that night, so nearby storefronts were riddled with fake bullet holes, and the odd fake gunfire and explosion interrupted our conversation.
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