Sickle-cell mice cured with their own cells
from New Scientist - Latest Headlines
(2007-12-7 4:00)
|
Mice have for the first time been cured of a severe blood disorder using stem cells created with tissue from their own tails
|
Roiling magnetic waves explain solar enigma
from New Scientist - Latest Headlines
(2007-12-7 4:00)
|
Magnetic waves ripple through the Sun's corona with enough energy to explain its mysteriously high temperature, new observations reveal
|
Ancient flood brought Gulf Stream to a halt
from New Scientist - Latest Headlines
(2007-12-7 4:00)
|
A huge glacial lake bursting into the Atlantic 8000 years ago did bring about a climate catastrophe, suggests new research
|
Saturn's 'flying saucer' moons built of ring material
from New Scientist - Latest Headlines
(2007-12-7 4:00)
|
Two small moons that lie within the planet's rings resemble UFOs, new images reveal?their equatorial ridges may be swept-up ring material
|
Humid balls help Rockies hit fewer home runs
from New Scientist - Latest Headlines
(2007-12-7 1:46)
|
Storing balls in a humidor did affect the scoring at Major League baseball games, say researchers, but not for the reasons pundits thought
|
Picture-sorting dogs show human-like thought
from New Scientist - Latest Headlines
(2007-12-7 0:51)
|
Dogs that have learned to put photographs into categories demonstrate the ability to process abstract concepts, say researchers
|
Flexible-jointed robot is no pushover
from New Scientist - Latest Headlines
(2007-12-6 21:52)
|
If robots are going to work alongside humans, then they will need to withstand the odd accidental bump or even deliberate kick
|
Dolphins wave weed to attract a mate
from New Scientist - Latest Headlines
(2007-12-6 21:34)
|
While men might try flowers, smart clothes or cars to impress the opposite sex, male Amazon river dolphins carry objects such as weed and sticks
|
[¥Ë¥å¡¼¥¹] ¥Ó¥¸¥Í¥¹¥Ç¥¶¥¤¥ó¸¦µæ½ê¡¢¶²Îµ·¿¥í¥Ü¥Ã¥È¡ÖPLEO¡×¤ò¸ø³«¡ÁâÃÆé¤«¤ò¤ê¤µ¤ó¡¢¹ÓË󹨤µ¤ó¤é¤Ë¤è¤ë¥
from Robot Watch
(2007-12-6 20:31)
|
|
'Scrambled' polymers kill drug-resistant bacteria
from New Scientist - Latest Headlines
(2007-12-6 18:00)
|
A random chain of polymers, used as a control in a recent study, turns out to be a very effective killer of antibiotic-resistant bacteria
|