Icelandic volcano's ash blanket was electric
from New Scientist - Online News
(2010-5-27 8:00)
|
An electric charge detected in Eyjafjallajökull's ash cloud could lead to airborne detectors that warn pilots of dangerous flying conditions
|
Watch the Gulf of Mexico oil spill in real time
from New Scientist - Online News
(2010-5-27 2:25)
|
Can't believe that the Deepwater Horizon oil pipe is still leaking? Now there's a way to check for yourself
|
Mysterious fossil is first ancestor of the squid
from New Scientist - Online News
(2010-5-27 2:00)
|
A famous half-billion-year-old fossil, one of the "weird wonders" from Canada's Burgess Shale, may be a cephalopod
|
Biofuels learn to eat less
from New Scientist - Online News
(2010-5-27 2:00)
|
Production of bioethanol has attracted global controversy because it uses important food crops. That could be about to change
|
Special report: Where next for synthetic life?
from New Scientist - Online News
(2010-5-27 2:00)
|
Craig Venter's creation of a synthetic cell was a tour de force, but the fruits of synthetic biology are more likely to come by other means
|
Today on New Scientist: 26 May 2010
from New Scientist - Online News
(2010-5-27 2:00)
|
All today's stories on newscientist.com at a glance, including: where synthetic life will go next, how biofuels will learn to eat less, and a tiny particle's big moment
|
How science is shaping up in the new Parliament
from New Scientist - Online News
(2010-5-27 1:00)
|
The parliamentary group devoted to science has survived the UK's parliamentary upheavals, but some of the new government's plans may not be as science-friendly
|
Shadows open window into the autistic mind
from New Scientist - Online News
(2010-5-27 0:01)
|
Most children use the shadows cast by items to speed identification. Not so those with autism, who regard the dark shapes as nothing but a distraction
|
'Light from sound' could spot cancers and terrorists
from New Scientist - Online News
(2010-5-26 23:46)
|
High-frequency sound can be converted directly to light, theory suggests. The process could be applied in new types of scanner
|
The many-worlds physicist couldn't cope with this one
from New Scientist - Online News
(2010-5-26 23:00)
|
The Many Worlds of Hugh Everett III by Peter Byrne is a story of thwarted ambition, blind faith in science, genius, subterfuge, adultery and drunkenness
|