Science News:
Science reborn in Tunisia
Academics are cautiously optimistic on anniversary of revolution.
Science Museum launches online games about the future of technology
Futurecade features games that ask questions about robotics, space, geo-engineering and synthetic biology The Science Museum has launched a suite of online games designed to raise questions about the future of medicine, robotics and technology. Developed as part of the Talk Science programme, which was initiated to encourage discussion of science in schools, the 'Futurecade' features four titles ...
Science behind the big freeze: is climate change bringing the Arctic to Europe?
The bitterly cold weather sweeping Britain and the rest of Europe has been linked by scientists with the ice-free seas of the Arctic, where global warming is exerting its greatest influence.
Science decodes 'internal voices'
Researchers turn brain waves from thoughts of words into actual words, in a breakthrough that could benefit comatose and locked-in patients.
UN 'needs greater integration between science and policy'
A report by a top-level political panel has endorsed calls for greater integration of science into all levels of policymaking on sustainable development.
Colworth Science Park attracts fourth academic occupier
Colworth Science Park in Bedfordshire, a joint venture between integrated property group Goodman and Unilever, is growing its academic community after attracting the University of Nottingham to take office space in its new multi-million innovation hub, The Exchange. Read more...
DIY science: should you try this at home?
When Richard Handl was arrested for attempting to split the atom on his stove, he joined a growing band of home experimenters cooking up all kinds of trouble behind the kitchen door Ängelholm is a pretty southern Swedish town, famed for its clay cuckoo manufacturing, a clay cuckoo being a kind of ocarina, which is a kind of flute. The crime rate here is practically zero. Except one of its ...
Let's give science a bad name in schools
The best way to get teens interested in science is to wash its dirty laundry in public, says Michael Brooks
Google Science Fair 2012: Everyone has a question. What's yours? [video] | GrrlScientist
Because instead of talking about what they know, some people talk about the questions that they ponder Remember last year's online Google Science Fair? Well, hold on to your hats because they're doing it again this year! In partnership with CERN, Lego, National Geographic and Scientific American, Google has announced their second online science fair. This is the largest global online science ...
In pictures: Science meets art
Photo winners use art to show the meaning of science
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