Biophysicist and open-science fan Stephen Curry, in The inexorable rise of open access scientific publishing, at The Guardian, notes that the move to open science is speeding up a wee faster than many ...
Michelle Starr is CNET's science editor, and she hopes to get you as enthralled with the wonders of the universe as she is. When she's not daydreaming about flying through space, she's daydreaming ...
There was big news in the field of kidney stone research last week, as anyone who scans the internet would know. “Research Finds Thrilling Cure for Kidney Stones: Roller Coasters,” declared NBC News. ...
Just ask any one of the 300,000 Americans who, in any given year, develop kidney stones: What if the excruciating pain of passing one of those little devils could be prevented by strapping yourself ...
Math and science are a scream for the 12 students in the course “Roller Coasters: Theory, Design, and Properties,” at Bates College, in Lewiston, Me. The students study roller-coaster design to learn ...
The City of Syracuse swore in its new mayor on Wednesday. Mayor Sharon Owens is now the first African American to hold the position in the city, as well as only Feet of snow headed to parts of CNY to ...
Got a kidney stone? No problem, says science, just ride a roller coaster. This new unconventional treatment to the ever-painful (and often expensive) passing of a kidney stone has a 70 percent success ...
Fourteen-year-old Matthew Rinck set his team’s roller coaster car at the top of the track and released it. It whirled around the wall-mounted track that technology education teacher Andrew Hollstein ...
Your brain wants nothing to do with roller coasters—and for a wonderfully simple reason: your brain would very much like you to stay alive. So anything that’s designed to haul you up to the top of a ...
Bar-headed geese rise and fall with the terrain below them when they migrate, scientists report in the Jan. 16 Science. This roller coaster flight pattern saves the birds energy, even though they must ...
Every year, flocks of geese fly hundreds of miles over the Himalayas, migrating from their breeding grounds in Mongolia to southeastern Tibet or India for the winter. Now, a new study reveals how ...
If you think riding a roller coaster is scary, how about flying one through the Himalayas? Scientists who tracked bar-headed geese across their mountainous seasonal migration have discovered that the ...