|
Healthy living can turn our cells' clock back
from New Scientist - Online news
(2013-9-17 8:01)
|
A healthy lifestyle increases the length of telomeres, the protective caps on our chromosomes that wear away with age
|
|
UHA味覚糖が咀嚼能評価システムを阪大と開発、グミ年300万個の体制整備
from 日経バイオテクONLINE
(2013-9-17 7:00)
|
ユーハ味覚糖(UHA味覚糖)は、大阪大学産学連携本部VBL咀嚼評価開発センターの野首孝祠特任教授らと共同で、全自動で咀嚼能力を測定できる装置を開発した。咀嚼能力評価のマーカーとしてβカロチン色素を加えた咀嚼能力測定用のグミゼリーを利用する。科学技術振興機構(JST)が独創的シーズ展開事業「委託開発」で企業化開発を行ってきた開発課題について成功と認定したと、2013年9月12日に発表した。
|
|
Astrophile: Cosmic poltergeist messed up Milky Way
from New Scientist - Online news
(2013-9-17 6:30)
|
Our galaxy may be haunted by a past meal– a dead dwarf galaxy ripped apart by our own is a key suspect behind unnatural groupings of stars
|
|
Whales record major life events in their earwax
from New Scientist - Online news
(2013-9-17 4:00)
|
For the first time an ear plug from a dead blue whale has given an account of its puberty, encounters with ocean pollutants and its stress levels
|
|
New Syria sarin deal will need speedy UN checks
from New Scientist - Online news
(2013-9-17 3:09)
|
As UN inspectors announce that sarin was used, US and Russia have called for "extraordinary procedures" to destroy Syrian chemical weapons by next July
|
|
Floods engulf highways and homes in Colorado
from New Scientist - Online news
(2013-9-17 2:13)
|
The deluge has killed five people and forced 12,000 to flee their homes after a year's worth of rain fell in six days
|
|
Wristband monitors your rock-climbing prowess
from New Scientist - Online news
(2013-9-17 2:08)
|
The plastic ClimbAx wristband collects key data about how a user moves during climbs– and can help them hone their style
|
|
Lost river guided early humans out of Africa
from New Scientist - Online news
(2013-9-17 1:47)
|
A climate model shows the Sahara desert once had three lush rivers. One led humans to the North African coast, from where they headed to the Middle East
|
|
Today on New Scientist
from New Scientist - Online news
(2013-9-17 1:31)
|
All the latest on newscientist.com: the first satellite to study planets from Earth's orbit, cheap ways to send stuff to space, plagiarism catcher and more...
|
|
Future law: Can you be slandered by a robot?
from New Scientist - Online news
(2013-9-17 0:00)
|
In a world awash with robots, teleports and self-driving cars, you are going to need a good lawyer, warns Richard Fisher (full text available to subscribers)
|