Today's Reuters Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News: | | Visitors to get first up-close look at space shuttle in New York Wed,18 Jul 2012 03:59 PM PDT Reuters - NEW YORK (Reuters) - The Enterprise has landed in New York City, where starting on Thursday the public will be allowed a close-up look at the first, prototype space shuttle created by NASA in 1976. The Enterprise exhibit is expected to boost attendance at the Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum by a third and help bring nearly 1.3 million people a year to the repurposed World War Two aircraft carrier docked on Manhattan's West Side. ... Full Story | Top | EU Commission backs open-access science publishing Tue,17 Jul 2012 07:27 AM PDT Reuters - LONDON (Reuters) - The European Commission, which controls one of the world's largest science budgets, has backed calls for free access to publicly funded research in a move that could force a major change in the business model for publishers such as Reed Elsevier. The Commission said on Tuesday that open access will be a "general principle" applied to grants awarded through the 80 billion euro ($97.92 billion) Horizon 2020 program for research and innovation. ... Full Story | Top | HIV drug creator Antonin Holy dies at 75 Tue,17 Jul 2012 05:18 AM PDT Reuters - PRAGUE (Reuters) - Czech scientist Antonin Holy, who played an important role in creating drugs to treat HIV and AIDS, has died at the age of 75, the Czech Academy of Sciences said on Tuesday. Holy died on Monday - the day U.S. health regulators for the first time approved using Truvada, a drug that he helped develop, to prevent infection in people who face a high risk of contracting the virus that causes AIDS. [ID:nL2E8IG8TG] Truvada includes Viread, a drug used to treat HIV, which Holy created with virologist Erik De Clercq. ... Full Story | Top | NASA's Mars rover may be in for blind landing Mon,16 Jul 2012 01:52 PM PDT Reuters - CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (Reuters) - NASA's new Mars rover is heading for a risky do-or-die touchdown next month to assess conditions for life on the planet, but the U.S. space agency may not know for hours whether it arrived safely, managers said on Monday. That's because the satellite that NASA was counting on for real-time coverage of the Mars Science Laboratory's descent into Gale Crater, located near the planet's equator, was sidelined last month by a maneuvering system glitch. ... Full Story | Top | Open access science debate shifts to EU after UK government backing Mon,16 Jul 2012 10:38 AM PDT Reuters - LONDON (Reuters) - The debate over free access to publicly-funded scientific research will shift to the European Commission after the UK government backed a report calling for financial support for researchers to use so-called 'open access' science journals. Open access journals charge researchers a fee for publishing their research rather than the subscriptions that traditional journals charge readers. ... Full Story | Top | German scientists concoct new coolant for electric cars Fri,13 Jul 2012 04:12 PM PDT Reuters - LONDON (Reuters) - Scientists in Germany have come up with a new fluid for cooling the expensive batteries in electric cars and thereby extending their life, another potential step in improving the cost efficiency of electric propulsion. The fluid, dubbed CryoSolplus, absorbs heat more effectively than either air or water and could allow for tighter packing of batteries under the hood, according to a team of researchers at the Fraunhofer Institute for Environmental, Safety and Energy Technology in Oberhausen. ... Full Story | Top | U.S. should scale down $1 billion Kansas biodefense lab: study Fri,13 Jul 2012 02:54 PM PDT Reuters - KANSAS CITY, Kansas (Reuters) - The United States should consider scaling down ambitious plans for a $1 billion laboratory in Kansas to study potentially deadly animal diseases, the National Research Council said on Friday in a key report to help the government decide how to proceed. Construction of the National Bio and Agro-Defense Facility in Manhattan, Kansas, has been stalled by concerns that deadly animal diseases could escape and devastate agriculture. Some have called the facility a costly boondoggle. ...
Full Story | Top | Gene-swapping vaccines spawn lethal poultry virus: experts Thu,12 Jul 2012 11:59 AM PDT Reuters - HONG KONG (Reuters) - Three vaccines used to prevent respiratory disease in chickens have swapped genes, producing two lethal new strains that have killed tens of thousands of fowl across two states in Australia, scientists reported on Friday. The creation of the deadly new variant was only possible because the vaccines contained live viruses, even though they were weakened forms, said Joanne Devlin, lead author of the paper published in the journal Science. Devlin and her team discovered how closely related the two new strains were with viruses in the vaccines after analyzing their genes. ... Full Story | Top | No crustacean, no cry? Bob Marley gets his own species Tue,10 Jul 2012 02:14 PM PDT Reuters - WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Reggae immortal Bob Marley has joined Barack Obama and Elvis Presley in the elite club of those who have biological species named in their honor. In Marley's case, it's a small parasitic crustacean blood feeder that infests fish in Caribbean coral reefs, now known as Gnathia marleyi. "I named this species, which is truly a natural wonder, after Marley because of my respect and admiration for Marley's music," Paul Sikkel, a marine biologist at Arkansas State University, said in a statement on Tuesday. "Plus, this species is as uniquely Caribbean as Marley. ...
Full Story | Top | Giant ice telescope hunts for dark matter's space secrets Tue,10 Jul 2012 12:02 AM PDT Reuters - MELBOURNE (Reuters) - Scientists are using the world's biggest telescope, buried deep under the South Pole, to try to unravel the mysteries of tiny particles known as neutrinos, hoping to shed light on how the universe was made. The mega-detector, called IceCube, took 10 years to build 2,400 meters below the Antarctic ice. At one cubic km, it is bigger than the Empire State building, the Chicago Sears Tower - now known as Willis Tower - and Shanghai's World Financial Center combined. ...
Full Story | Top | Hawking's rival says Higgs wager win is icing on cake Fri,6 Jul 2012 10:24 AM PDT Reuters - LONDON (Reuters) - The U.S. scientist who won a $100 wager with Stephen Hawking over whether the Higgs boson would ever be found said on Friday winning was the icing on the cake of a major scientific discovery. Scientists at Europe's CERN research centre announced on Wednesday that they had found a new subatomic particle which appeared to be the boson imagined and named half a century ago by theoretical physicist Peter Higgs. Hawking, Britain's most famous living scientist, said the discovery should earn Higgs the Nobel Prize, but admitted in an interview that it would make him $100 poorer. ...
Full Story | Top | Asian nations want to sink South Korea whale hunt plan Thu,5 Jul 2012 01:08 PM PDT Reuters - PANAMA CITY (Reuters) - South Korea's proposal to resume whaling for scientific research has angered other Asian countries and conservationists who said the practice would skirt a global ban on whale hunting. Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard said she would fight the proposal, which was made on Wednesday at a meeting of the International Whaling Commission in Panama City, while the United States said it planned to take the matter up with the South Korean government. ...
Full Story | Top | Japanese inventor hopes "ro-butt" can develop communication Wed,4 Jul 2012 09:18 PM PDT Reuters - TOKYO (Reuters) - The mechanical buttocks may look like a new low for the world of Japanese robotics, but they may actually mark a new leap into the future of humanoid development. Inventor Nobuhiro Takahashi programmed his creation, called "SHIRI" or "butt" in Japanese, to respond with different emotions to different human touches. Takahashi hopes to use the proto-type technology to develop responses which can be applied to other part of a robot's body, in particular the face, to help with non-verbal communication. ... Full Story | Top | From a vial of mom's blood, a fetus's entire genome Wed,4 Jul 2012 10:10 AM PDT Reuters - NEW YORK (Reuters) - The days of pregnant women having a 3-inch-long (8-centimetre-long) hollow needle jabbed into their abdomens may be numbered. For the second time in a month, scientists have announced that a simple blood test, rather than more invasive tests such as amniocentesis, can determine a fetus's genetic make-up, identifying mutations causing any of about 3,000 inherited disorders that arise from a glitch in a single gene, such as cystic fibrosis. ... Full Story | Top | Poof! Dust disk that might have made planets disappears Wed,4 Jul 2012 10:02 AM PDT Reuters - WASHINGTON (Reuters) - In a cosmic case of "now-you-see-it, now-you-don't," a brilliant disk of dust around a Sun-like star has suddenly vanished, and the scientists who observed the disappearance aren't sure about what happened. Typically, the kind of dusty haloes that circle stars have the makings of rocky planets like Earth, according to Ben Zuckerman, one of a team of researchers who reported the finding on Wednesday in the journal Nature. Composed of warm dusty material, these disks can be seen by telescopes looking for infrared light. ...
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