09 Dec, 2013 | by Labroots

Nuts Shown to Increase Life Span

According to the result of a 30-year study making headlines in numerous science news publications, people may have even more reason to make nuts a part of their daily diets. Various types of nuts are already known to have health benefits, thanks to the anti-oxidants that they contain. Now, according to a science article in Discovery Science, it looks like they may help people live longer. Not only...... Read More

06 Dec, 2013 | by Labroots

Water Off A Duck’s Back? Meet The Driest Material Ever

Source:  http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-25004942 Imagine coming inside from the torrential rains of a thunderstorm, your face and hair dripping wet, but your clothes are bone dry.  And you didn’t need to shake your umbrella off at the door: it also hasn’t a drop of rain on it either! Those are two of the applications being dreamt-up by a team of engineers who have created “the...... Read More

05 Dec, 2013 | by Labroots

Antibiotics Still being Over-Prescribed, Especially for Children

Doctors are being advised to use greater caution when prescribing antibiotics to kids with symptoms that may be indicative of a viral infection instead of a bacterial one. Although there have been warnings against giving in to patients’ wishes for antibiotics, even when their doctor doubted the potential for helping, such as with cases of influenza, the warning is being focused on those physicians...... Read More

04 Dec, 2013 | by Labroots

Loss of Funding Creating Impact on Science Jobs, Research

Even those who don’t have science careers are painfully aware that the recent government shutdown had a huge impact on research and those who have science jobs in a number of different fields. Just last month, the Green Bank telescope, the largest radio telescope in the world, stopped moving. As a result, the research being performed by astronomers from around the globe came to a halt. According...... Read More

03 Dec, 2013 | by Labroots

New Discovery in Nano-Technology

Over time, advancements in technology have allowed for smaller and smaller electronic devices. A new discovery has led to the production of the smallest FM radio transmitter in the world. Researchers at Columbia, led by James Hone, a mechanical engineering professor, and Kenneth Shepard, an electrical engineering professor, used graphene to develop a nano-mechanical system that is able to create FM...... Read More

27 Nov, 2013 | by Labroots

Getting More Energy from the Sun

Solar energy continues to grow as a valuable resource amid concerns over a depleting fuel supply and the decline in the earth’s environment. Although improvements in how solar energy is collected and used have been implemented, solar is still a long way from being our primary source of energy. Thanks to the discovery of researchers working to improve the use of solar energy, we may be able to get...... Read More

26 Nov, 2013 | by Labroots

New Treatment Promises to Cure MRSA

The bacterium staphylococcus aureus, commonly referred to as MRSA, has been deemed a “superbug” because of its resistance to antibiotics. Affecting 1 million Americans every year, MRSA causes serious infections of the bone, heart, and implanted medical devices. Due to the inability of the bacterium to be effectively treated and the seriousness of the deep-seated chronic infections it causes, MRSA...... Read More

25 Nov, 2013 | by Labroots

Your Brain Sees What You Are Missing

An article reporting the results of a study focusing on how the brain works made science news this month, when researchers found that the human brain has the capacity to process and understand things that we see, without being consciously aware of them. The article was printed in the science journal Psychological Science, detailing how the study was performed and why the results are so important. Jay...... Read More

22 Nov, 2013 | by Labroots

Is Time a Result of Quantum Entanglement?

Source: https://medium.com/the-physics-arxiv-blog/d5d3dc850933 http://arxiv.org/abs/1310.4691 It is ironic that two of Albert Einstein’s most famous works – the respective theories of general relativity and special relativity – have been prisoner to a seemingly irreconcilable difference in the century since they were each postulated.  The problem is time.  Or, rather, how each model approaches...... Read More

21 Nov, 2013 | by Labroots

Microbial Computers Could Revolutionize Medical Diagnostics

Source: http://stanmed.stanford.edu/2013fall/article10.html Imagine going to your doctor for a routine physical examination.  At some point your physician asks you to imbibe some exotic concoction.  A few hours later, you have a bowel movement: one that your doctor collects and shines ultraviolet light upon.  He’s looking for your solid waste material to shine back at him; you are praying it...... Read More