Search
Free newsletter Subscribe
NewScientist.com
NewScientist.com home page Latest science & technology news Hot topics in science Q & A's from everyday science Feedback, letters, book reviews, interview Links to other science sites Contents of this week's print edition Subscribe to New Scientist magazine New Scientist magazine archive Search 1000's of science and technology jobs
NEWS
All the latest news
Search News
 
 


Print Edition
• Subscribe
Subscribe to New Scientist Magazine
• Cover Story
• In this issue
• Archive
• Where to buy


FEATURE STORIES
In this week's print edition
ANTIMATTER ATTACKS
Something strange happens in the instant before particle and antiparticle annihilate one another. Find out more and we could revolutionise chemistry
 
LAST OF THE GREAT MIGRATIONS
New Zealand was the last part of the world to be colonised. But where did the settlers come from and how did they get there?
 
THE JUNGLE WITHIN
An ecosystem in our guts, teeming with undiscovered species, could yield vital clues to a range of diseases
 

 
The World's No.1 Science & Technology News Service
 
 
Entangled photons secure money transfer

In the first real-world demonstration of the technique, entangled photons are used to create an unbreakable communications code

17:10  22  April 2004
 
Scientists demand law against animal rights extremism

Victims of animal rights fanatics band together to lobby that the UK government puts a stop to violence and intimidation

16:27  22  April 2004
 
'Weird' meteorite may be from Mars moon

The Kaidun meteorite is like no other, including minerals never seen before, but the Red Planet's moon Phobos could provide an explanation

14:02  22  April 2004
 
Hard disk 'speed limit' discovered

Powerful magnetic pulses from a particle accelerator revealed an upper limit for writing magnetic information

10:40  22  May 2004
 
Credit card only works when spoken to

The card packs a microphone, a loudspeaker, a battery and a voice-recognition chip, rendering stolen cards useless

19:00  21  April 2004
 
'Virgin birth' mammal rewrites rules of biology

The mouse is the daughter of two female parents, but experts are sceptical that the technique could help two women have a biological child

18:00  21  April 2004
 
Critical internet communication flaw revealed

Experts say the flaw could be exploited to knock out the machines that direct traffic between computer networks on the internet

14:58  21  April 2004
 
Gravity probe safely makes it to orbit

The NASA spacecraft blasts off successfully and starts gearing up for an exquisitely precise test of Einstein's theory of gravity

14:22  21  April 2004
 
Killer convicted thanks to relative's DNA

The world's first conviction using "familial searching" to track a suspect via a relative's DNA is made in the UK

17:55  20  April 2004
 
Year-long space station trips rejected

Doubling the length of missions would allow Russia's cash-strapped agency to sell extra spacecraft seats to space tourists - but NASA has safety concerns

17:50  20  April 2004
 
Bumper compendium of human genes released

The database links over 20,000 genes - about two-thirds of the total - to biological data on the genes' functions, promising deeper insight into disease

17:40  20  April 2004
 
Particle physicists rescue rare vinyl recordings

Classic audio preserved only on old records could be saved using technology developed to help discover sub-atomic particles

11:11  20  April 2004
 
Iron tablets can improve women's brainpower

Giving supplements to women who are iron deficient, even only modestly, dramatically improves attention and memory, suggest new findings

11:07  20  April 2004
 
World's marine life is getting sicker

A new study provides the first solid evidence that creatures from turtles to sea urchins are getting more diseases, more often

16:55  19  April 2004
 
Super-antibodies break the cell barrier

Molecules that bind to targets within cells, not their surface, could lead to new treatments for diseases, a biotech company claims

15:23  19  April 2004
 
NASA three steps nearer shuttle launch

The latest report on progress says the agency is still on schedule, but in-orbit inspections and management reforms remain as challenges

10:35  19  April 2004
 
Coming soon: seat by seat subtitles

Film subtitles that can be tailored to suit small sections of an audience could go on general release at the end of 2004

10:15  19  April 2004
 
Metal coolant adds to space junk risk

The globules, ejected from nuclear-powered Soviet satellites, are revealed as an unexpected danger to satellites and the shuttle

10:30  18  April 2004
 
Local taboos could save the seas

Pacific island nations may give citizens legal control of their seas, in the hope that traditional knowledge and customs can protect fish stocks

09:00  17  April 2004
 
Space station mission targets science

Gene expression in worms, bacteria that turn excrement into electricity and a human lab rat all feature in the short programme

17:02  16  April 2004
 
Ancient shell jewellery hints at language

Early humans strung shells together at least 75,000 years ago, suggesting advanced concepts of symbolism already existed

13:45  16  April 2004
 
New Blu-Ray video disk is made of paper

The high capacity DVD will be cheaper and more environmentally friendly, say it developers, and can be cut up when no longer needed

13:37  16  April 2004
 
Amazon's search engine impresses experts

The retailer's Google-based service gives users added extras, but it also keeps a log of their searching and web browsing

12:58  16  April 2004
 
Fire-fighting fluid leaves computers intact

Even plunging a laptop into the liquid fails to damage it and books also emerge similarly unscathed

10:24  16  April 2004
 
Spinal electrodes could cure incontinence

Stimulating the sacral nerve in the lower back could help people who cannot control their bowels, suggests a new study

10:16  16  April 2004
 
Scientists stirred to ridicule ice age claims

A catastrophic deep freeze triggered by global warming features in both a new blockbuster movie and a controversial report to the US military

19:00  15  April 2004
 
Distant planet revealed by microlensing

Astronomers say it is a victory for the controversial technique, which can detect invisible planets circling distant, invisible stars

18:00  15  April 2004
 
Big Bang glow hints at funnel-shaped Universe

If confirmed, our Universe is curved like a Pringle potato chip, shaped like a horn, and named after a Star Trek character

11:58  15  April 2004
 
Riddle of planetoid's missing moon revealed

Hubble images of the most distant Solar System object ever spotted are perplexing astronomers by suggesting Sedna has no moon

10:13  15  April 2004
 
Monitor detects awareness during surgery

A large trial proves it can help prevent the horror of patients feeling pain while being paralysed by anaesthetics

19:00  14  April 2004
 
Young female chimps outlearn their brothers

Girl chimps are faster and smarter at getting to grips with tools used to eat termites, echoing learning differences in human children

18:00  14  April 2004
 
Runaway stars may solve black hole riddle

Stars that bulk up by crashing into other stars could become the middleweight black holes that have so tantalised astronomers

18:00  14  April 2004
 

Subscribe to New Scientist Magazine
 

For more exclusive news and expert analysis every week subscribe to New Scientist print edition.

 
Special Today
Richard Glen Boire
Mind control is getting smarter by the minute, warns Richard Glen Boire, co-founder of the Center for Cognitive Liberty and Ethics in California


Subscribe to New Scientist


Elsewhere today
All the best science stories from the web
A surprising result in lung cancer fight
New York Times (free registration required)


ADVERTISEMENTS
-------
For unbiased reviews & prices of digital cameras use DigitalCamera-HQ.com

Digital Camera
Digital Cameras
Digital Camera Review
Digital Camera Reviews
Sony Digital Camera
Canon Digital Camera
Camcorder
Camcorders
Canon 300D
Digital Camera Links
-------
Advice on personal & corporate finance at Prudent Minds Finance Guide
Credit Cards
Insurance
Investments
Loans
Mortgages
Pensions
Savings
-------


 
 
 
 
About newscientist.com •  Subscribe •  Contact Us •  FAQ •  Media Information •  Disclaimer •  Terms and Conditions •  Site Map •  Cookies •  Privacy Policy  © Copyright Reed Business Information Ltd.