Using Home Astronomy Software, Citizen Scientists Discover New Pulsar
Image: Einstein@Home
more>>
Japanese and American duo nearly doubles pi record, using home-built computer
Alexander Yee
more>>
Strained graphene creates pseudo-magnetic fields stronger than any before seen
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
more>>
IBM researchers create the most detailed brain map yet
PNAS
more>>
By manipulating condensation conditions, researchers create room-temperature ice
Editor at Large
more>>
Antibacterial graphene 'paper' could lead to better bandages
ACS Nano
more>>
German scientists measure how fast an electron jumps, the shortest time interval ever measured
Thorsten Naeser / Max-Planck-Institute of Quantum Optics
more>>
Higgs Discovery Is 'Just Rumors,' Tweets Fermilab
Image: Fermilab's Twitter Response
more>>
Build It: An LED Lamp that Visualizes Data From the Web
Image: John B. Carnett
more>>
Yes, Hayabusa Asteroid Probe Contains Particles
Image: JAXA
more>>
03.09.10
Through the Einstein@Home program, about 250,000 private citizens from 192 countries donate time on their home and office computers to help comb through astronomical data. Now, for the first time, three of those citizen scientists -- Chris and Helen Colvin of Iowa and
Read more...
Shigeru Kondo spent some $18,000 to build a desktop Windows computer that, over the course of three months, shattered the world record for calculating pi. Running in the 54-year-old system engineer's home, where he lives with his wife and mother, the machine calculated pi to 5 trillion
Read more...
Putting the right kind of strain on a patch of graphene can make super-strong pseudo-magnetic fields, a new study says. The finding sheds new light on the properties of electromagnetism, not to mention the odd properties of graphene, according to researchers at
Read more...
Researchers at IBM have created the most complex neurological map ever seen, detailing the comprehensive long-distance network that makes up the macaque monkey brain in
Read more...
In a breakthrough so hot it's cool, Spanish researchers have figured out how to make water freeze at room temperature. By artificially manipulating the mechanisms by which
Read more...
A new antibacterial paper could lead to food wrappers that keep food fresh longer, shoes that never stink, and bandages with a built-in ability to deter infection. It turns out a paper-like material made of graphene -- thin sheets of carbon just a single atom thick -- have
Read more...
During an average day of knocking electrons loose from their host atoms with high-energy lasers, a team of European physicists uncovered the shortest time interval ever measured in nature. At about 20 attoseconds, the
Read more...
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory responds via Twitter to rumors that circulated earlier this week claiming
Read more...
The vast amount of information at our fingertips these days can be as distracting as it is useful. Tracking something like the movement of an index on the stock market by feverishly checking a ticker all day is often more than you want to deal with. So this cube lets you display data it receives
Read more...
JAXA, the Japanese space agency, has released the first photographs of the interior of the Hayabusa probe. Last week, we were starting to fear that the seven-year mission had returned to Earth without the crumbs of asteroid Itokawa that it had been sent for.
Read more...
I've always thought it would be funny to build scale-size exploding grain silos for a model train
Read more...
The vast amount of information at our fingertips these days can be as distracting as it is useful. Tracking something like the movement of an index on the stock market by feverishly checking a ticker all day is often more than you want to deal with. So this cube lets you display data it receives
Read more...
A new antibacterial paper could lead to food wrappers that keep food fresh longer, shoes that never stink, and bandages with a built-in ability to deter infection. It turns out a paper-like material made of graphene -- thin sheets of carbon just a single atom thick -- have
Read more...
Through the Einstein@Home program, about 250,000 private citizens from 192 countries donate time on their home and office computers to help comb through astronomical data. Now, for the first time, three of those citizen scientists -- Chris and Helen Colvin of Iowa and
Read more...
DARPA's ardent desire to realise every sci-fi concept ever dreamed of continues with a biologically-inspired computer project which aims for feline brain functionality. But this time it's pinning its hopes on memristor devices which can simulate the behaviour of biological synapses in the brain.
Memristors
Read more...
Russia's oil reserves have given the nation considerable political muscle, but Russian leaders also want to resurrect some scientific grandeur. Now they hope to build its first scientific city since the Berlin Wall came down, and they're looking to California's Silicon Valley for inspiration,
Read more...
A more powerful magnetic material may have emerged to topple previous record-holder iron cobalt, until now the most magnetic material on Earth. The new iron and nitrogen compound might also force physicists to revise their understanding of magnetism, according to the Minnesota
Read more...
Many augmented reality projects like to cite Minority Report as an inspiration, but MIT's Glove Mouse project takes a very direct cue from the touch-free display manipulations of Tom Cruise's character in the film. In a new video, the glove mouse shows off its wireless stuff.
MIT
Read more...
In the world of IT, it really doesn't matter how much data you can transmit if you can't send it safely and securely. Now, Toshiba researchers in the UK have created the first high-speed network connection that is theoretically
Read more...
One of the richest men in history is spreading his wealth around again. The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation announced its fourth round
Read more...
Popular Science has been a leading source of science, technology and gadget news since 1872. With up-to-the minute latest space news, insightful commentary on the new innovations and concept cars ...if it's new or future technology you'll find it at popsci.com.au.
WW Media - Popular Science © 2010
Gadgets - Cars - Science
Popular Science: breaking news, articles and media for Tech Savvy readers - school science projects, science projects, ideas and much more.
The team at Popular Science has been the leading source of science, technology and gadget news since 1872. Launched in 2008 this Australian edition brings you in-depth articles, breaking news, media and videos from all around the world. Discover new technology, test drive the latest health and energy articles, keep up to date with the latest environmental news on climate change and global warming and explore the universe with our latest social science news.
Popular Science - Best New Earth Science, Popular Science Projects, Articles and News in Australia and New Zealand and from around the world, subscribe today!