People can sustainably share resources, under some conditions

Sometimes, there is no "tragedy" in the tragedy of the commons, according to a new analysis that challenges a widely accepted theory. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Effort clarifies major branch of insect tree of life

The insects known as Hemiptera are not a particularly glamorous bunch. This group includes stink bugs, bed bugs, litter bugs, scale insects and aphids. Their closest relatives are thrips, bark lice and parasitic lice. But with a massive number of species, two-thirds of which are … | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Early US data show big jump in online holiday shopping

Early sales data released Monday and over the weekend suggested a strong start to the US holiday shopping season but analysts said it was too soon to declare victory overall. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Spain says Ryanair violated right to strike: unions

Spain has found Ryanair guilty of violating cabin crews' right to strike and work safety regulations as well as obstructing labour inspections, threatening to fine the low-frills airline for 16 infractions, unions said Monday. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Scientists discover a new route to antibiotics using gene editing

Scientists have discovered a new chemical process—also known as a biosynthetic pathway—in bacteria which could lead to a new generation of antibiotics being produced and manufactured. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Meet Lindsey: She'll be your guide today

A 5ft 2ins tall magenta robot, equipped with sensors and cameras, will guide visitors through exhibitions at a Lincoln museum from today. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Family matters for future wealth

Australians pride themselves on having a classless society, where wealth is determined not by how rich your parents are but by your own efforts. However new research, for the first time using actual income numbers from two generations of Australians, paints a less egalitarian pic … | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Using microcredit to increase rice yield in Bangladesh

In the developing world, access to credit can lead to higher productivity and an increase in living standards, but the ability to have this access is not universal. Formal financial institu-tions are reluctant to lend to households with low-incomes or which lack collateral. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Fishing companies lose millions of dollars every year and they don't know it

Fishing companies operating worldwide are leaving between $51 billion and $83 billion in unrealized net economic benefits on the table every year due to the overexploitation underperformance of fish stocks, according to new research from the Sea Around Us initiative, the Institut … | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Researchers find that a drying Canadian delta has driven muskrat population decline

Indigenous communities have used muskrat fur to make clothing for generations and the animal's meat is considered a seasonal delicacy. But it turns out decades of trapping are not primarily responsible for the animal's decline across North America. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Justices skeptical of Apple in case about iPhone apps' sales

The Supreme Court seemed ready Monday to allow a lawsuit to go forward that claims Apple has unfairly monopolized the market for the sale of iPhone apps. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Combined local and global actions could lessen impacts of change in marine environment

Increased oil and gas activities could combine with ocean warming and acidification to have a significant negative impact on marine organisms, a new study suggests. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Quantum computing at scale: Scientists achieve compact, sensitive qubit readout

Professor Michelle Simmons' team at UNSW Sydney has demonstrated a compact sensor for accessing information stored in the electrons of individual atoms—a breakthrough that brings us one step closer to scalable quantum computing in silicon. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

NASA finds a cloud-filled eye in Typhoon Man-yi

Visible imagery from NASA's Aqua satellite revealed Typhoon Man-yi's eye had become cloud-filled. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

The Latest: NASA spacecraft nearing touchdown on Mars

The Latest on the landing attempt by NASA's InSight spacecraft at Mars (all times local): | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

French-American man abandons attempt to swim Pacific

A French-American man has given up his attempt to swim across the Pacific Ocean after a storm broke the mainsail of his support ship, organizers said Monday. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

General Motors says cutting 15% of workforce to save $6 bn

In a massive restructuring, US auto giant General Motors announced Monday it would cut 15 percent of its workforce to save $6 billion and adapt to "changing market conditions." | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Scientists find italian ryegrass is resistant to multiple herbicides

Herbicides have been instrumental in managing Italian ryegrass, a weed that frequently competes with perennial crops in California. Herbicide-resistant populations have become increasingly commonplace, though, including paraquat-resistant Italian ryegrass found recently in a Cali … | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

How the Atlantic Ocean became part of the global circulation at a climatic tipping point

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@phys.org | 5 years ago

The Arctic is turning brown because of weird weather – and it could accelerate climate change

Over the last few years Arctic scientists have reported a surprising finding: large areas of the Arctic are turning brown. This is in part due to extreme events linked to winter weather, such as sudden, short-lived periods of extreme warmth. These events are occurring as the clim … | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Science knowledge shifted along religious, political affiliations

The public's trust in, perception and understanding of science seems to be eroding, according to popular media and some recent studies, but little is known about what may be driving that change. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Young people value diversity, humour and honesty in their friendships – new research

Friendships made in school play a special part in young people's development. They are more than just moral support, friends help them learn key social skills, and serve as a source of social support. Close school friends also help young people develop a sense of importance, trus … | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

How ancient viruses got cannabis high

World's first cannabis chromosome map reveals the plant's evolutionary past and points to its future as potential medicine. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

College-educated cops enforce the law more aggressively

In the wake of controversial and widely publicized incidents involving the use of deadly force by the police against racial and ethnic minorities, President Obama appointed the President's Task Force on 21st Century Policing in 2015 to propose ways to improve policing in the U.S. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Light-activated, single-ion catalyst breaks down carbon dioxide

A team of scientists has discovered a single-site, visible-light-activated catalyst that converts carbon dioxide (CO2) into "building block" molecules that could be used for creating useful chemicals. The discovery opens the possibility of using sunlight to turn a greenhouse gas … | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

NASA sees stronger Tropical Cyclone 33W headed toward Vietnam

33W was a tropical depression when it crossed the southern and central Philippines. As it moved through the South China Sea over the last two days it strengthened into a tropical storm and was renamed Usagi. On Nov. 23, NASA-NOAA's Suomi NPP satellite captured a visible image of … | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Dead fish to power Norwegian cruise liners

Norwegian cruise operator Hurtigruten plans to use dead fish to power some of its ships, it said on Monday, as it seeks to reduce its pollution and climate change impact. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Six feet under, a new approach to global warming

A Washington State University researcher has found that one-fourth of the carbon held by soil is bound to minerals as far as six feet below the surface. The discovery opens a new possibility for dealing with the element as it continues to warm the Earth's atmosphere. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Simulations suggest graphene can stretch to be a tunable ion filter

Researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have conducted simulations suggesting that graphene, in addition to its many other useful features, can be modified with special pores to act as a tunable filter or strainer for ions (charged atoms) in a liq … | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Living electrodes with bacteria and organic electronics

Researchers at the Laboratory of Organic Electronics, Linköping University, have together with colleagues at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in Berkeley, California, developed a method that increases the signal strength from microbial electrochemical cells by up to twen … | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Detective mission to characterise and trace the history of a new African meteorite

Wits researchers go on a mission to describe, classify and trace the 4.5 billion-year-old history of a meteorite that landed in Madagascar. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Fine-tuning cell death: new component of death machinery revealed

An important component of the microscopic machinery that drives cell death has been identified by Walter and Eliza Hall Institute scientists. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Impact on the collective behaviour of animal groups

Disturbance events such as human interference or predator attacks may negatively affect animal groups. Using an innovative tracking technique, researchers from the University of Konstanz and the Max Planck Institute for Ornithology in Germany have demonstrated how groups of birds … | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Climate change is driving wildfires, and not just in California

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@phys.org | 5 years ago

How does potassium enter cells?

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@phys.org | 5 years ago

Drinking water sucked from the dusty desert air

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@phys.org | 5 years ago

Biodiesel by-product helps fuel come clean

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@phys.org | 5 years ago

Artificial intelligence could help crack previously unsolvable murder cases

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@phys.org | 5 years ago

Drones offer ability to find, ID and count marine megafauna

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@phys.org | 5 years ago

Better wastewater treatment in India with Dutch expertise

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@phys.org | 5 years ago

Disruption is overrated in terms of innovation

Innovation is not all sunshine and frolicking lambs. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Microchip implants are threatening workers' rights

It's not often trades unions and employers are equally worried about an issue threatening workers' rights. But recently, the UK's Trades Union Congress and the main body that represents British businesses, the CBI, have both voiced concerns about the budding practice of implantin … | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Whether herbivores increase or decrease plant diversity depends on what's on the menu

Cows eat grass. It seems simple enough. But just which kind of grass cows and their vegetarian comrades munch on can influence the entire ecosystem. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Image: The Persian Gulf

The Copernicus Sentinel-3A satellite takes us over the Gulf. Also known as the Arabian Gulf and the Persian Gulf, this marginal sea of the Indian Ocean is just under 1000 km long and covers an area of around 250 000 sq km. It is bordered by eight nations shown counter-clockwise f … | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Focus on Vega developments

Vega is proving its reliability. Based on this heritage, ESA and European industry are building new elements that will increase Vega's performance, capabilities and flexibility from mid-2019. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

White-browed Shortwing is not 1 but 4 species

The White-browed Shortwing (Brachypteryx montana) has been considered to be a single species distributed from the central Himalayas to the southeast Chinese mainland and the island of Taiwan, the Philippines and Indonesia. The mainland and Taiwan Island populations have recently … | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Mysterious egg on ocean floor was actually a catshark, and it was moving, NOAA says

A mysterious "translucent egg case" found last week off an uninhabited island near Puerto Rico has been identified by NOAA explorers as something few scientists had seen. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago

Clarifying effects of negative mass

A FLEET study led by University of Queensland's David Colas clarifies recent studies of negative mass, investigating the strange phenomenon of self-interference. | Continue reading


@phys.org | 5 years ago