Flash photography doesn't harm seahorses – but don't touch

We all enjoy watching animals, whether they're our own pets, birds in the garden, or elephants on a safari during our holidays. People take pictures during many of these wildlife encounters, but not all of these photographic episodes are harmless. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Rates of social isolation vary by rurality and demographics

Social isolation and loneliness are increasingly being recognized as urgent public health threats, with risks to health and mortality as serious as those from obesity or smoking. Some researchers have cautioned that rural residents could be at greater risk for isolation due to th … | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Study presents surprising explanation for differences in Southern and Northern Lights

For many years, scientists assumed the aurora seen around the north pole was identical to the aurora seen around the south pole. The poles are connected by magnetic field lines and auroral displays are caused by charged particles streaming along these field lines. Because the cha … | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

How the use of different forms of titanium oxide influences perovskite solar cell performance

Researchers at Tokai University report in Nano Letters a systematic study on the effects that using different forms of titanium oxide in planar perovskite solar cells has on the performance of the devices. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Scientists explain formation of lunar dust clouds

Physicists from the Higher School of Economics and Space Research Institute have identified a mechanism explaining the appearance of two dusty plasma clouds resulting from a meteoroid that impacted the surface of the moon. The study was published in JETP Letters. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Australopithecus sediba: No such thing as a missing link

Autralopithecus sediba is not the missing link that connects modern man to its more primitive ancestors. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

How friendly mice can affect their lonely cagemates

From the second we are born, humans start to develop social relationships with individuals and groups starting with parents, family and friends. Similarly, mice are social animals just like us. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Previously unknown crystalline phase of semi-aqueous calcium carbonate discovered

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@phys.org | 5 years ago

New Horizons' newest and best-yet view of Ultima Thule

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@phys.org | 5 years ago

New technologies could solve rocket challenges 800 years in the making

It may be hard to believe, but solid propellants have been used in rockets since at least the 13th century, beginning with the Chinese. Now, Purdue University researchers are exploring several patented techniques to address two significant challenges with modern solid propellants … | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Geoscientists insist weather forecasting is more accurate than ever and could get even better

A trio of geoscientists with Pennsylvania State University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology has published an an update in the journal Science on the state of weather forecasting. In their paper, Richard Alley, Kerry Emanuel and Fuqing Zhang report statistics demonstr … | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

The first tendril-like soft robot able to climb

Researchers at IIT-Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia created the first soft robot mimicking plant tendrils. It is able to curl and climb using the same physical principles determining water transport in plants. The research team is led by Barbara Mazzolai, and results have been pub … | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Environmental protection in outer space

Should regulations for environmental protection be valid beyond our solar system? Currently, extra-terrestrial forms of life are only deemed worth protecting if they can be scientifically investigated. But what about the numerous, presumably lifeless planets whose oxygen atmosphe … | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Silicones obtained at low temperatures with the help of air

Russian scientists have developed a new method for synthesizing para-carboxyplenylsiloxanes, a unique class of organosilicon compounds. The resulting compounds are promising for creating self-healing, electrically conductive, heat- and frost-resistant silicones. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Spotify rolls out feature that allows users to mute artists they don't want to hear

There are a variety of reasons people might not like a certain musician. Perhaps they aren't fans of the sound of an artists songs, or the artist has been involved in controversial activity. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Panel calls for more timely access to public genomic datasets

A large panel of scientists has published a Public Forum piece in the journal Science calling for the scientific community to provide better access to public genomic datasets. They suggest the current system allows restrictions by researchers to slow or prevent access to such dat … | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

How growing cities can support at-home electric vehicle charging

Rapid urban population growth is driving many cities around the world to reduce their carbon footprints. In Canada, two major policy agendas are designed to achieve this: boosting urban density and promoting low-carbon transportation such as electric vehicles (EVs). | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

The stubborn high-pressure system behind Australia's record heatwaves

If you think the weather this month has been like Groundhog Day (albeit much hotter), you'd probably be right! Much like a stuck record, weather systems seem to have stalled over most of the country. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

With climate change less obvious in Midwest, park visitors want to know how local resources are impacted

In image of a polar bear stranded on a sheet of ice makes for a dramatic impression of the impact of climate change, but for most Americans, it has little resemblance to the effects closer to their homes. In the Midwest, lacking obvious climate indicators like melting glaciers, i … | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Moon rock recovered by astronauts likely originated on Earth

In findings published overnight in science journal Earth and Planetary Science Letters, a sample collected during the 1971 Apollo 14 lunar mission was found to contain traces of minerals with a chemical composition common to Earth and very unusual for the moon. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

To protect us from the risks of advanced artificial intelligence, we need to act now

Artificial intelligence can play chess, drive a car and diagnose medical issues. Examples include Google DeepMind's AlphaGo, Tesla's self-driving vehicles, and IBM's Watson. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Young adults caught in a dilemma between traditional family models and modern views

A study funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation has found that even young adults who do not yet have children are influenced by traditional concepts of family. At the same time, they have modern views of equality, career engagement and childcare. The result is a dilemma t … | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Engineers develop novel strategy for designing tiny semiconductor particles for wide-ranging applications

Two-dimensional (2-D) transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) nanomaterials such as molybdenite (MoS2), which possess a similar structure as graphene, have been donned the materials of the future for their wide range of potential applications in biomedicine, sensors, catalysts, p … | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Synthetic chemistry takes anti-cancer compounds out of the sea slug and into the lab

The natural world, with all its diversity, is a popular place for researchers to go looking for new drugs, including those that fight cancer. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Consumer-led research gives a voice to disadvantaged

In the last week of August 2018, the Australian Government's Productivity Commission released its "Rising inequality? A stocktake of the evidence" research paper. Its conclusion: "Over nearly three decades, inequality has risen slightly in Australia." | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Researchers examine political divide behind climate change beliefs

Despite a scientific consensus, citizens are divided when it comes to climate change, often along political lines, and scholars want to better understand why. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Ecologists create a new model to predict extinction risk

A new population viability model, with an accompanying web app, is helping scientists to better forecast population changes and extinction risk for imperiled species. The method was developed by ecologists at the University of Georgia River Basin Center with support from NASA and … | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Scientists nail down important plant compound pathway

Purdue University plant molecular biochemist Natalia Dudareva and colleagues have described a complete second pathway used by plants to produce phenylalanine, a compound important for all living organisms. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Maternal instincts don't explain the gender gap on GM foods

Studies have found that women are more skeptical of genetically modified (GM) foods than men, but little research has been done on what's responsible for that gender gap. Conventional wisdom has been that maternal instincts may explain the difference, but research shows that this … | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Identifying the origin of macroscopic friction between clay mineral surfaces

NIMS, the University of Tokyo and Hiroshima University jointly discovered for the first time, through theoretical calculation and experiment, that macroscopic frictions occurring between clay mineral surfaces originate from interatomic electrostatic forces between these surfaces. … | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Upending a fundamental reaction in organic chemistry—discovery of a new nucleophilic substitution reaction

Nucleophilic substitution is a class of chemical reactions encountered throughout organic chemistry, including those used to manufacture common petrochemical and pharmaceutical products. Its underlying mechanism was discovered 82 years ago by the British chemists Edward Hughes an … | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Why biodiversity among marine mammals and birds generally rises in cold, temperate waters

In ecology, the diversity of species generally increases as you move toward the warmer latitudes of the tropics. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Netflix, Instagram team up for easier sharing of binge-watching recommendations

Passing along your binge-watching favorites just got easier. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Target stores to accept mobile payment including Apple Pay, Samsung Pay and Google Pay

It'll soon be getting much easier to pay with your smartphone at Target. The retailer, which had been a major holdout, announced in a blog post Tuesday that it will soon accept Apple Pay, Google Play, Samsung Pay as well as "contactless cards" from Mastercard, Visa, American Expr … | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Streaming chill vibes? Spotify data says the season is the reason

Are you a night owl? Then you likely prefer relaxing, low-intensity music. Same thing if it's wintertime. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Google says Nest security camera terror warning from North Korea was hoax, not a hack

For one Northern California family it was a terrifying experience: an emergency warning that came through a Nest surveillance camera of three intercontinental ballistic missiles, apparently from North Korea, headed straight to Los Angeles, Chicago and Ohio. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

New theory sends temperatures to new lows

Researchers have developed a new theory for recording the lowest temperatures ever measured, with the largest accuracy allowed by the laws of Nature. This line of research holds promise to revolutionise low-temperature physics and could find a plethora of applications in emerging … | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Nanotechnology enables engineers to weld previously un-weldable aluminum alloy

An aluminum alloy developed in the 1940s has long held promise for use in automobile manufacturing, except for one key obstacle. Although it's nearly as strong as steel and just one-third the weight, it is almost impossible to weld together using the technique commonly used to as … | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Remains of explorer who first rounded Australia found in UK

The remains of a noted Royal Navy explorer who led the first circumnavigation of Australia have been found by archeologists excavating a burial ground where a railway station is planned. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Neanderthal hunting spears could kill at a distance

Neanderthals have been imagined as the inferior cousins of modern humans, but a new study by archaeologists at UCL reveals for the first time that they produced weaponry advanced enough to kill at a distance. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Researchers report new class of polyethylene catalyst

A team of chemists from the University of Houston has reported the discovery of a new class of catalyst to produce ultra-high-weight polyethylene, a potential new source of high-strength, abrasion-resistant plastic used for products ranging from bulletproof vests to artificial jo … | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Fault lines are no barrier to safe storage of CO2 below ground

Carbon dioxide emissions can be captured and securely stored in underground rocks, even if geological faults are present, research has confirmed. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

'World's cheapest car' nears end of the road in India

It was billed as the world's cheapest car and shaped like a jelly bean—but after a bumpy 10-year ride India's Tata Nano is nearing the end of the road. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

India launches pint-sized satellite designed by students

A lightweight satellite designed by students that can be held in the palm of the hand has been launched by Indian scientists, burnishing the country's credentials in miniature design technology. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Embraer signs agreement to sell commercial division to Boeing

Brazilian aircraft manufacturer Embraer on Thursday signed an agreement for the sale of its commercial divison to Boeing—and set the date for a shareholders meeting to approve the tie-up on February 26. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Liberia wrestles with poverty and ecology in bid to protect sharks

George Toe reflects on the good old days, when catching a couple of sharks helped fill a fisherman's pocket and fed a hungry family. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Nissan-Renault on smoother road but speed bumps loom: analysts

Renault's appointment of a new leadership duo to replace the detained Carlos Ghosn should ease tensions with Japanese partner Nissan, analysts say, although the French state's close involvement remains a brake on ties. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

S. Korea in airborne fight against 'Chinese' pollution

Seoul on Friday sent aircraft over the Yellow Sea to carry out cloud-seeding experiments in an effort to tackle air pollution many South Koreans blame on China. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago