Contents Pages by Subject

Science, Medicine and Technology

Subject Photo
Article Image

LiveScience.com

Researchers directing a special type of light at metal poked with holes in irregular patterns recently discovered that all the light behaved like a liquid and fell across the metal to find its way through the escape holes.

Article Image

LiveScience.com

Twins can be identical, fraternal and apparently semi-identical, scientists now report. Researchers discovered twins who are identical on their mom's side of the equation but share only half their genes from dad. Here's how it happened:

Article Image

AFP

The French and American physicists used a laser beam to produce a surprisingly long and steady jet of soapy liquid that was narrower than a human hair. When directed at a different angle, it pushed the liquid into a hump-like shape.

Article Image

LiveScience.com

Remains from a 95-million-year-old marine creature with nubs for legs is clarifying how some lizards shed their limbs as they crept through evolutionary time and morphed into slinky snakes.

Article Image

LiveScience.com

In the near future, longer-lasting batteries could run on virtually anything sugary, including tree sap or flat soda pop. Scientists say these sweet new batteries could operate three to four times longer than the conventional lithium ion batteries

Article Image

Popular Science

The Plasma Converter consumes any type of waste—from dirty diapers to chemical weapons—it disintegrates trash into its constituent elements by tearing apart molecular bonds. The only by-products are an obsidian-like glass and ultimately hydrogen.

Article Image

Reuters

Earlier research had pegged this area -- one of the more recently evolved parts of the human brain -- as playing a role in generating social emotions. In fact, the people with damage in this region due to stroke or other causes experienced severely d

Article Image

LiveScience.com

While not usually considered paragons of tender, familial love, some spiders do have a touchy-feely side. Scientists have discovered two arachnids that caress their young and snuggle together.

Article Image

AFP

[It has always bothered me that no evidence of burrowing dinos existed.] Fossil hunters have found the remains of small dinosaurs that made their home in a burrow, a finding the reptiles could exploit a much wider habitat than thought.

Article Image

LiveScience.com

Scientists have turned water into ice in nanoseconds, which means really, really fast. That's not the most interesting part, though. The ice is hotter than boiling water. The experiment was done at the Sandia National Laboratories' huge Z mac

Article Image

New Scientist

The first hint that a new type of matter may exist came in 1983. "Twenty five years ago we thought we understood everything about how matter changes phase," says Wen. "Then along came an experiment that opened up a whole new world.

Article Image

NY Times

[fascinating speculation] One of the more embarrassing mysteries of human evolution is that people are host to no fewer than three kinds of louse while most species have just one.

Article Image

LiveScience.com

The shorter genomes of birds originated in saurischian dinosaurs, the group of dinosaurs from which birds evolved and that includes Tyrannosaurus rex. So rather than being a characteristic of birds or flying animals, short genomes should be thought o

Article Image

LiveScience.com

[misleading] Humans caught pubic lice, aka "the crabs," from gorillas roughly three million years ago. Rather than close encounters of the intimate kind, humans most likely got the lice from sleeping in gorilla nests or eating the apes.

Article Image

Reuters

A painstaking scan of the DNA of tumor cells shows hundreds of previously unsuspected genes are involved in cancer. They found more than 1,000 different mutations in just one family of genes taken from 200 samples of breast, stomach, colorectal and o

Article Image

Reuters

A team of British scientists has set sail on a voyage to examine why a huge chunk of the earth's crust is missing, deep under the Atlantic Ocean -- a phenomenon that challenges conventional ideas about how the earth works.

Article Image

NY Times

With the flip of another switch, powerful up-and-down vibrations, 50 a second, started shaking the cylinder. A bubble floating in the liquid — phosphoric acid — started to shine, brightening into an intense ball of light like a miniature star.

Article Image

Reuters

New Zealand fishermen may have caught the largest Colossal squid ever found -- weighing 992 pounds and with rings the size of tires. Was caught by fishermen long lining for toothfish in deep ocean off Antarctica,

Article Image

Visian ICL

Imagine being able to enjoy life without worrying about your glasses or contracts. The Visian ICL(Implantable Collamer Lens) by STAAR Surgical Company offers your freedom from nearsightedness. With the Visian ICL, you could enjoy the beauty

AzureStandard