sciencefriday | Shared With: Everyone - May 23 2008 | science, npr, radioQuoted: Astronomers who happened to be observing in the right place at the right time recently collected new pieces of data that allow them to paint an unprecedented picture of what goes on during the initial stages of an ultra-powerful stellar explosion.
sciencefriday | Shared With: Everyone - 3 days ago | science, npr, radioQuoted: New research shows that when people perceive they have no control over a given situation, they are more likely to see illusions, patterns where none exist and even believe in conspiracy theories. The study suggests that people impose imaginary order when no real order can be perceived.
sciencefriday | Shared With: Everyone - 3 days ago | science, npr, radioQuoted: SpaceX's flagship Falcon1 rocket has successfully launched from an island in the central Pacific, becoming the first privately-developed rocket to orbit the planet. NASA has already contracted SpaceX to begin private space flight missions to the International Space Station beginning in 2010.
sciencefriday | Shared With: Everyone - 3 days ago | science, npr, radioQuoted: Current models indicate that the magnetic fields that enclose galaxies grow slowly over billions of years. But scientists have used a telescope to peer back millions of years in time and discovered a distant galaxy with a magnetic field at least 10 times the average strength.
sciencefriday | Shared With: Everyone - 3 days ago | science, npr, radioQuoted: There is a new line of camouflages clothing designed around the science of how deer see. This new camouflage uses specific colors and patterns specially designed to blend into a deer's vision.
sciencefriday | Shared With: Everyone - 3 days ago | science, npr, radioQuoted: A consortium of Northeast states has completed the first cap-and-trade greenhouse gas auction in the U.S. Under cap-and-trade, limits are set on emissions. Companies that do not use up their quota of emissions are able to sell their excess emission capacity to other companies.
sciencefriday | Shared With: Everyone - 3 days ago | science, npr, radioQuoted: In 1967, Robert Kearns received patents for inventing intermittent car windshield wipers. He offered his idea to automakers but was turned away. When Ford and Chrysler started manufacturing cars with wipers without crediting Kearns, he took the case all the way to the Supreme Court. A new film called Flash of Genius tells his story.
sciencefriday | Shared With: Everyone - 3 days ago | science, npr, radioQuoted: NASA has postponed a planned repair mission to the Hubble Space Telescope after a new problem developed with the orbiting observatory. Ed Weiler, associate administrator of the Science Mission Directorate at NASA, explains why repairs won't take place until Feb. 2009 — at the earliest.
sciencefriday | Shared With: Everyone - 10 days ago | science, npr, radioQuoted: Solar winds — invisible gas plasma emitted by the Sun — protect the solar system from cosmic rays that are hostile to terrestrial life. But new data from the Ulysses NASA probe indicate solar wind output is lower than has ever been previously documented.
sciencefriday | Shared With: Everyone - 10 days ago | science, npr, radioQuoted: Famous for his work on the first oral contraceptive in 1951, chemist Carl Djerassi has published a number of novels and plays over the last 20 years. His latest play, Taboos, grapples with the questions of sex divorced from reproduction.
sciencefriday | Shared With: Everyone - 10 days ago | science, npr, radioQuoted: The long-awaited "Google phone" has arrived. The G1 phone carries Google's Android software and runs on T-Mobile networks. Though its touch screen and online integration make the G1 analogous to Apple's iPhone, the Android platform is open for use by multiple phone developers.

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