Tuesday, September 18, 2012

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Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News

9/17/2012 12:31:16 PM

In this photo provided by NASA, the Soyuz TMA-04M spacecraft lands with Expedition 32 Commander Gennady Padalka of Russia, NASA Flight Engineer Joe Acaba and Russian Flight Engineer Sergie Revin in a remote area near the town of Arkalyk, Kazakhstan, on Monday, Sept. 17, 2012. Padalka, Acaba and Revin returned from five months onboard the International Space Station where they served as members of the Expedition 31 and 32 crews. (AP Photo/NASA, Carla Cioffi)An international three-man crew onboard a Russian-made Soyuz capsule touched down successfully on the cloudless central Kazakhstan steppe Monday morning after 123 days at the International Space Station.


9/18/2012 7:23:47 AM

This photo provided by NASA shows space shuttle Endeavour atop NASA's Shuttle Carrier Aircraft, or SCA, at the Shuttle Landing Facility at NASA's Kennedy Space Center on Monday, Sept. 17, 2012 in Cape Canaveral, Fla. The beginning of Endeavour's final flight to California has been postponed because of weather along the flight route. NASA had planned for the 747 carrying the shuttle to take off from Kennedy Space Center on Monday. (AP Photo/NASA, Bill Ingalls)Space shuttle Endeavour apparently doesn't want to leave home.


9/15/2012 7:55:41 AM

U.S. Navy personnel carry the remains of Apollo 11 astronaut Neil Armstrong during a burial at sea service aboard the USS Philippine Sea (CG 58), Friday, Sept. 14, 2012, in the Atlantic Ocean. Armstrong, who died last month in Ohio at age 82, walked on the moon in July 1969. (AP Photo/NASA, Bill Ingalls)The first man to walk on the moon has been buried at sea.


9/14/2012 7:54:37 PM

In this Dec. 1, 2006 photo released by Fish Eye Films, a small group of emperor penguin stand on the edge of an ice drift in the Ross Sea in the Antarctic. Antarctica's Ross Sea is often described as the most isolated and pristine ocean on Earth, a place where seals and penguins still rule the waves and humans are about as far away as they could be. But even here it has proven difficult, and maybe impossible, for nations to agree on how strongly to protect the environment. (AP Photo/Fish Eye Films, John Weller) EDITORIAL USE ONLY, NO SALES, NO ARCHIVEAntarctica's Ross Sea is often described as the most isolated and pristine ocean on Earth, a place where seals and penguins still rule the waves and humans are about as far away as they could be. But even there it has proven difficult, and maybe impossible, for nations to agree on how strongly to protect the environment.


9/14/2012 12:44:38 AM

Undated images released by the Public Library of Science and available Thursday Sept 13 2012 show a captive adult male Cercopithecus hamlyni, left, and an adult male Cercopithecus lomamiensis, right. Researchers have identified a new species of African monkey, locally known as the Lesula, right, described in the Sep. 12 issue of the open access journal PLOS ONE. This is only the second new species of African monkey discovered in the last 28 years. The monkey bears a resemblance to the owl faced monkey, left, but its coloration was unlike that of any other known species. (AP Photo/ Public Library of Science, Noel Rowe (left) and Maurice Emetshu, right)A team of scientists has identified a new species of monkey in central Africa that had been known to the locals simply as lesula, a medium-sized, slender animal that looks similar to an owl-faced monkey that was already known to scientists.


9/18/2012 6:01:21 AM

Huge Greenland Iceberg Starting to Break ApartOff the coast of northwest Greenland, an enormous iceberg is beginning to go to pieces.


9/18/2012 3:58:56 AM

Rare 'Fire Devil' Caught on FilmNature's not much for subtlety. Just ask Chris Tangey, the man who watched in awe as a 100-foot-high (30-meter-high) whirlwind of fire tore around a patch of Australian Outback on Tuesday (Sept. 11).


9/18/2012 3:52:17 AM
In common weight-loss advice, "get more sleep," should figure just as prominently as "eat less" and "move more," two researchers in Canada argue.
9/18/2012 6:10:03 AM

Partial Solar Eclipse on Mars Photographed by Curiosity RoverNASA's Mars rover Curiosity has snapped stunning shots of a brief partial solar eclipse on the Red Planet, capturing images of the tiny Martian moon Phobos crossing the face of the sun.


9/18/2012 4:18:16 AM

Shuttle Endeavour Set for Final Ferry Flight Wednesday, If Weather AllowsCAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Space shuttle Endeavour is riding high and ready to go, if only the weather would cooperate.


9/18/2012 3:04:00 AM
According to an article in Gizmodo, a team at the Johnson Spaceflight Center in Houston is studying what sort of technology could be developed that would create a warp drive, a common element in science fiction such as "Star Trek."
9/18/2012 12:13:01 AM

Warp Drive May Be More Feasible Than Thought, Scientists SayHOUSTON — A warp drive to achieve faster-than-light travel — a concept popularized in television's Star Trek — may not be as unrealistic as once thought, scientists say.


9/17/2012 10:09:35 PM

Giant Super-Magnetic Star Has Scientists BuzzingThe most magnetic massive star seen yet is dragging a giant cloak of trapped charged particles around it.


9/17/2012 2:32:47 AM

'Carl Sagan with Gills:' A Q&A with Bob Ballard, Discoverer of The TitanicIn graduate school in the 1960s he was part of a wave of young researchers who established the existence of plate tectonics. In 1979 he found black smokers, vents on the ocean floor that spew out water from within the Earth, which wasn't previously thought possible. He has helped find new and unknown life forms around deep sea vents, which "threw out the textbook" on biology and the origin of life, which was previously thought to have originated from energy captured from sunlight.


9/15/2012 8:30:54 PM

Strange Mystery Spheres on Mars Baffle ScientistsA strange picture of odd, spherical rock formations on Mars from NASA's Opportunity rover has scientists scratching their heads over what exactly they're looking at.


9/15/2012 2:07:11 AM

Golden Goose Awards Honor 'Silly' ScienceScience that's seemingly silly — but is actually significant — received some enchanted recognition recently. Discoveries involving glowing jellyfish, radiation waves and tropical coral have garnered the first Golden Goose Awards Thursday (Sept. 13) night.


9/14/2012 9:11:11 AM

A box with excluded non-standard cigarettes is seen at the cigarette-maker Philip Morris International Inc. in Kutna HoraREUTERS - Smokers may get fewer hours of sleep and have less restful slumber than non-smokers, according to a German study that looked at more than two thousand people. Researchers whose work appeared in the journal Addiction Biology found that of nearly 1,100 smokers surveyed, 17 percent got fewer than six hours of sleep each night and 28 percent reported "disturbed" sleep quality. That compared with rates of seven percent and 19 percent respectively among more than 1,200 non-smokers who were also surveyed, said lead researcher Stefan Cohrs, of Charite Berlin medical school in Germany. ...


9/14/2012 6:07:38 AM

The International Space Station is pictured on a computer monitor at the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer Payload Operations and Command Center at the European Organization for Nuclear Research in MeyrinGENEVA (Reuters) - Scientists at CERN have smashed together various particles for the first time, moving closer to learning what was in the super-hot plasma wonderland that formed right after the primeval Big Bang, the European physics research centre said on Thursday. The announcement followed another boost for physicists at CERN near Geneva with the effective endorsement by independent experts in a key journal of their claimed discovery of a new particle, the Higgs Boson. ...


9/14/2012 12:44:38 AM

Undated images released by the Public Library of Science and available Thursday Sept 13 2012 show a captive adult male Cercopithecus hamlyni, left, and an adult male Cercopithecus lomamiensis, right. Researchers have identified a new species of African monkey, locally known as the Lesula, right, described in the Sep. 12 issue of the open access journal PLOS ONE. This is only the second new species of African monkey discovered in the last 28 years. The monkey bears a resemblance to the owl faced monkey, left, but its coloration was unlike that of any other known species. (AP Photo/ Public Library of Science, Noel Rowe (left) and Maurice Emetshu, right)A team of scientists has identified a new species of monkey in central Africa that had been known to the locals simply as lesula, a medium-sized, slender animal that looks similar to an owl-faced monkey that was already known to scientists.


9/12/2012 4:52:23 PM
CANBERRA (Reuters) - Australian scientists have developed a genetic test to predict autism spectrum disorder in children, which could provide a long-sought way for early detection and intervention, according to a study published on Wednesday. About one in 150 children has autism, with symptoms ranging from social awkwardness and narrow interests to severe communication and intellectual disabilities, said researchers led by the University of Melbourne. The researchers used U.S. ...


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