All Science
- Cyborg rose: The beginning of a cyborg plant era?Scientists have developed an electronic rose by running conductive materials through the plants' vascular systems.
- As NASA shifts focus to Mars, will private companies look to the moon?Speaking at the SpaceCom Expo in Houston,聽NASA Administrator Charles Bolden predicted that private businesses will 'assume a lead role' in returning humans to the moon.
What will the University of Maine do with an indoor ocean?Simulating wind and waves will help engineers find out if their innovations can hold up to the power of the sea.
'Blue dragon' washes ashore in Australia. Where did it come from?A beach-goer caught the sea creature, while it was probably on the hunt for stinging jellyfish.聽
Titan's massive ice cloud suggests five more years of winter, at leastA huge ice storm on Saturn's moon, Titan, is composed of聽hydrogen, carbon, and nitrogen.
Scientists refrigerate water...with lasers!Lasers are typically used to heat or burn. But new research shows that lasers can cool things, such as water, too.
Bizarre mollusk's armor covered with rock-lens eyes, say scientistsAn unusual undersea creature called the chiton could point the way for human innovation in the creation of multifunctional tools and building materials.
Beautiful circuits: The dawn of the cyborg roseScientists have wound electronic circuits into plants' vascular tissues for the first time, paving the way for potential energy applications.
NASA preps cargo for space station: What's going up this time?Plans are to resupply the crew currently aboard the International Space Station with more than 7,000 pounds of food, scientific equipment, and parts for the orbiting laboratory.
First Look100 eyes and counting: What this weird mollusk can teach materials scientistsTiny, primitive chitons - a type of sea mollusk - have hundreds of eyes embedded in their plated shells.
How does a Brazilian spider reveal our connection to Middle Earth?Scientists have named a newly discovered spider, Smeagol, after a 'Lord of the Rings' character. The arachnid joins a host of other areas in which 'Lord of the Rings' has fused with reality.
When did people first arrive in South America?A team of scientists find evidence of human occupation in Chile thousands of years earlier than previously thought.
How fish can turn invisible in the open seaA new study shows how some fish are able to reflect and manipulate vibrations from polarized light to affectively disappear from predators.聽
These slimy deep-sea worms are actually quite close cousins to humansNew research finds that humans and a type of marine worm share some 70 percent of genes.
Scientists directly observe planets being bornLying some 450 light-years from Earth, dust聽around a young star called LkCa 15 is starting to gather into planets, say astronomers.
El Ni帽o plus the hottest year on record: What that equals for 2015The UN weather agency's Secretary-General called聽the level of preparedness on both international and local levels, 'unprecedented,' thanks in part to lessons learned in 1998.
Some birds 'tap dance' to woo potential mates, say scientistsResearchers captured high-speed video of cordon-bleu songbirds' courtship behaviors revealing rhythmic dance steps. Watch the video to see and hear the birds' 'tap dancing' below.
Scientists observe the birth of a new planet for the first time everThe new world, spotted in its infancy, sheds light on planet formation and opens the way for more discoveries of other such baby planets.聽
More advanced computer models show Antarctic melt may be less severeA new study from The Open University indicates that the sea level rise from melting Antarctic ice sheets may be less than past studies have predicted.
Why fewer chimps are being used as guinea pigsThe National Institutes of Health will retire the last 50 chimps it uses for medical research, accelerating a years-long trend against using our closest relatives for experiments.聽