Science News
Lag in Times Square suspect's court date defended
Quantum crack in cryptographic armour
By Zeeya Merali
Quantum cryptography isn't as invincible as many researchers thought: a commercial quantum key has been fully hacked for the first time.
In theory, quantum cryptography--the use of quantum systems to encrypt information securely--is perfectly secure. [More]
Intelligence chief Blair resigns
Nonexpert treatment shown to be more effective than primary care in soothing widespread anxiety
NEW YORK--One-size-fits-all treatments are particularly rare in the mental health world, where each patient's ailments can seem unique. [More]
White powder scare at Philadelphia's Liberty Bell
Rand Paul causes stir with civil rights comment
Iran may cancel atom swap deal if sanctions passed
World's smallest water lily saved from extinction
Two years ago, the world's smallest water lily, a plant known as Nymphaea thermarum whose pads reach only one centimeter in diameter, disappeared from its only habitat, a few square meters near a hot spring in Mashyuza, Rwanda. Local agriculture had drained the spring of most of its water, and as a result, the water lily became extinct in the wild.
Luckily, a few samples had been collected 10 years earlier by the man who discovered the species in 1985, botanist Eberhard Fischer of Koblenz-Landau University in Germany. But unfortunately, the tiny plant proved almost impossible to propagate.
[More]Google premieres Web television gamble
Artificial life? Synthetic genes "boot up" cell
Now ain't that special? The implications of creating the first synthetic bacteria
Is life special, so special that we cannot understand it, much less create it? Are living things endowed with some sort of special power, force or property that distinguishes the inorganic from the organic, the living from the dead? Can life be nothing more than the precise interaction of physical stuff? [More]
Man-Made Genetic Instructions Yield Living Cells for the First Time
This story was updated at 5:00 p.m.
The first microbe to live entirely by genetic code synthesized by humans has started proliferating at a lab in the J. Craig Venter Institute (JCVI). Venter and his colleagues used a synthetic genome--the genetic instruction set for life--to build and operate a new, synthetic strain of Mycoplasma mycoides bacteria, according to an online report published May 20 by Science . [More]
Music Listeners Like Harmony's Math
Why do some chords sound sweet but others make you wince? Well it appears our ears--or at least the ears of 250 Minnesota undergrads--prefer chords containing harmonically related frequencies, according to a study in the journal Current Biology . [McDermott et al, www.current-biology.com ]
Even a simple note on my guitar has an array of harmonic frequencies. But the frequencies have a special harmonic relationship, which is why you hear it as a single sound with a single pitch.
[More]Fermilab Finds New Mechanism for Matter's Dominance over Antimatter
The Large Hadron Collider may be up and running outside Geneva, but the particle accelerator it supplanted as top dog in the particle physics community appears to have a few surprises left to deliver. Data from the workhorse Tevatron collider at Fermilab in Illinois show what appears to be a preference for matter over antimatter in the way an unusual kind of particle decays, according to a new analysis in a Tevatron research collaboration. [More]
Toyota effort criticized by House panel
12 Events That Will Change Everything, Made Interactive
Landis admits doping, accuses Armstrong
When Ideas Have Sex
In his 1776 work An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations , Scottish moral philosopher Adam Smith identified the cause in a single variable: “the propensity to truck, barter, and exchange one thing for another.” Today we call this free trade or market capitalism, and since the recession it has become de rigueur to dis the system as corrupt, rotten or deeply flawed.
If we pull back and take a long-horizon perspective, however, the free exchange between people of goods, services and especially ideas leads to trust between strangers and prosperity for more people. Think of it as ideas having sex. That is what zoologist and science writer Matt Ridley calls it in his book The Rational Optimist: How Prosperity Evolves (HarperCollins, 2010). Ridley is optimistic that “the world will pull out of the current crisis because of the way that markets in goods, services and ideas allow human beings to exchange and specialize honestly for the betterment of all.”
[More]