ScienceDaily: Strange Science News |
- Teaching ancient brains new tricks
- Radio signals from distant stars suggest hidden planets
- Ancient city could have been destroyed by cosmic airburst, evidence suggests
- Meditation training reduces long-term stress, hair analysis shows
- Multiple individuals are buried in the Tomb of Nestor’s Cup, study finds
- Evolutionary reason why females feel the cold more than males do
- Trapping light with disorder
Teaching ancient brains new tricks Posted: 11 Oct 2021 08:08 AM PDT Scientists have found a way to decode the brain activity associated with individual abstract scientific concepts pertaining to matter and energy, such as fermion or dark matter. |
Radio signals from distant stars suggest hidden planets Posted: 11 Oct 2021 08:08 AM PDT Using the world's most powerful radio antenna, scientists have discovered stars unexpectedly blasting out radio waves, possibly indicating the existence of hidden planets. |
Ancient city could have been destroyed by cosmic airburst, evidence suggests Posted: 08 Oct 2021 01:05 PM PDT Researchers have presented evidence that a Middle Bronze Age city called Tall el-Hammam, located in the Jordan Valley northeast of the Dead Sea, was destroyed by a cosmic airburst. |
Meditation training reduces long-term stress, hair analysis shows Posted: 07 Oct 2021 09:22 AM PDT A new study finds that mental training reduces the concentration of the stress hormone cortisol in hair. The amount of cortisol in hair provides information about how much a person is burdened by persistent stress. |
Multiple individuals are buried in the Tomb of Nestor’s Cup, study finds Posted: 06 Oct 2021 11:34 AM PDT The Tomb of Nestor's Cup, a famous burial in Italy, contains not one deceased individual, but several, according to a new study. |
Evolutionary reason why females feel the cold more than males do Posted: 05 Oct 2021 09:48 AM PDT Researchers offer a new evolutionary explanation for the familiar scenario in which women bring a sweater into work, while their male counterparts feel comfortable wearing short sleeves in an air-conditioned office. The researchers concluded that this phenomenon is not unique to humans, with many male species of endotherms (birds and mammals) preferring a cooler temperature than the females. |
Posted: 05 Oct 2021 07:19 AM PDT Researchers have demonstrated disorder-induced localization, a rather difficult wave phenomenon to observe, but also one of the most striking and puzzling manifestations of wave interference predicted by Nobel Prize laureate P.W. Anderson for electrons and, later, generalized to light waves. |
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