ScienceDaily: Top Technology News |
- New molecule found in space connotes life origins
- New tool assesses skill development in robotic microsurgery
- Scanning babies' fingerprints could save lives through vaccination tracking
- Key reaction for producing 'atmosphere's detergent' observed
- New tool assesses skill development in robotic microsurgery
- Studying nanocrystals by passing them through tiny pores
- Football-size robot can skim discreetly along a ship's hull to seek hollow compartments concealing contraband
- 'Multi-spectra glasses' for scanning electron microscopy
- New technology may lead to prolonged power in mobile devices
- Nanocomposites toughen up
- Overcome noise problems in ultrasensitive measurements of tiny amounts of compounds
- NASA rover drill pulls first taste from Mars mountain
- Can cartoons be used to teach machines to understand the visual world?
- Suomi NPP satellite data used for mitigating aviation-related volcanic hazards
- Fertilizer and fuel: Nitrogen-fixing enzyme also produces hydrocarbons
- Turning the Moon into a cosmic ray detector
- Conflictive animations support the development of programming skills
- Computational model: Ebola could infect more than 1.4 million people by end of January 2015
- Graphene looks promising as a flexible, low-cost touchscreen solution
- Experts call for moratorium on use of new internet domain .health
- From rats to humans: Trial will attempt to get paralyzed humans walking again
New molecule found in space connotes life origins Posted: 26 Sep 2014 06:36 PM PDT |
New tool assesses skill development in robotic microsurgery Posted: 26 Sep 2014 11:11 AM PDT |
Scanning babies' fingerprints could save lives through vaccination tracking Posted: 26 Sep 2014 11:10 AM PDT Each year 2.5 million children die worldwide because they do not receive life-saving vaccinations at the appropriate time. Now researchers are developing a fingerprint-based recognition method to track vaccination schedules for infants and toddlers, which will increase immunization coverage and save lives. |
Key reaction for producing 'atmosphere's detergent' observed Posted: 26 Sep 2014 11:10 AM PDT |
New tool assesses skill development in robotic microsurgery Posted: 26 Sep 2014 11:07 AM PDT |
Studying nanocrystals by passing them through tiny pores Posted: 26 Sep 2014 08:21 AM PDT Researchers have now applied a cutting-edge technique for rapid gene sequencing toward measuring other nanoscopic structures. By passing nanoscale spheres and rods through a tiny hole in a membrane, the team was able to measure the electrical properties of those structures' surfaces. Their findings suggest new ways of using this technique, known as 'nanopore translocation,' to analyze objects at the smallest scale. |
Posted: 26 Sep 2014 08:21 AM PDT |
'Multi-spectra glasses' for scanning electron microscopy Posted: 26 Sep 2014 08:21 AM PDT |
New technology may lead to prolonged power in mobile devices Posted: 26 Sep 2014 08:20 AM PDT |
Posted: 26 Sep 2014 07:17 AM PDT |
Overcome noise problems in ultrasensitive measurements of tiny amounts of compounds Posted: 26 Sep 2014 07:17 AM PDT |
NASA rover drill pulls first taste from Mars mountain Posted: 26 Sep 2014 07:15 AM PDT |
Can cartoons be used to teach machines to understand the visual world? Posted: 26 Sep 2014 07:09 AM PDT |
Suomi NPP satellite data used for mitigating aviation-related volcanic hazards Posted: 26 Sep 2014 06:13 AM PDT |
Fertilizer and fuel: Nitrogen-fixing enzyme also produces hydrocarbons Posted: 26 Sep 2014 05:58 AM PDT Plants need nitrogen and carbon to grow. Photosynthesis allows them to take in the latter directly from the air, but they have to procure nitrogen through their roots in the form of organic molecules like ammonia or urea. Even though nitrogen gas makes up approximately 80 percent of Earth's atmosphere, the plant can only access it in a bound - or 'fixed' - form. Farmers thus use fertilizers to provide their crops with nitrogen. The only living beings that can convert nitrogen from the air into usable molecules are microorganisms - for example nodule bacteria. |
Turning the Moon into a cosmic ray detector Posted: 26 Sep 2014 05:58 AM PDT Scientists are to turn the Moon into a giant particle detector to help understand the origin of Ultra-High-Energy (UHE) cosmic rays -- the most energetic particles in the Universe. The origin of UHE cosmic rays is one of the great mysteries in astrophysics. Nobody knows where these extremely rare cosmic rays come from or how they get their enormous energies. Physicists detect them on Earth at a rate of less than one particle per square kilometer per century. |
Conflictive animations support the development of programming skills Posted: 26 Sep 2014 05:56 AM PDT Traditional educational tools present information to students in a conventional way: what they present is true and students are expected to learn what is presented. Educators have now developed a tool that tricks students during their learning process. They use "conflictive animations" to teach computer programming, which is a very challenging topic for students due to its abstract nature. |
Computational model: Ebola could infect more than 1.4 million people by end of January 2015 Posted: 26 Sep 2014 05:55 AM PDT The Ebola epidemic could claim hundreds of thousands of lives and infect more than 1.4 million people by the end of January, according to a statistical forecast released this week by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The CDC forecast supports the drastically higher projections released earlier by a group of scientists, including epidemiologists with the Virginia Bioinformatics Institute, who modeled the Ebola spread as part of a National Institutes of Health-sponsored project called Midas, short for Models of Infectious Disease Agent Study. |
Graphene looks promising as a flexible, low-cost touchscreen solution Posted: 26 Sep 2014 05:55 AM PDT |
Experts call for moratorium on use of new internet domain .health Posted: 25 Sep 2014 05:58 PM PDT As the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers moves forward with plans to launch health-related generic top-level domains, such as .health and .doctor, a coalition of health policy academics and clinicians are raising concerns about a process they say 'favor[s] business interests and the generation of profits over the future integrity of the Health Internet.' |
From rats to humans: Trial will attempt to get paralyzed humans walking again Posted: 24 Sep 2014 11:49 AM PDT A completely paralyzed rat can be made to walk over obstacles and up stairs by electrically stimulating the severed part of the spinal cord. Scientists discovered how to control in real-time how the rat moves forward and how high it lifts its limbs. Now a new lab will extend this technology to human patients as early as next summer. |
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