Inside Science

InsideScience

Inside Science is an editorially independent news product of the American Institute of Physics, a nonprofit organization dedicated to advancing, promoting and serving the physical sciences. Link: http://www.insidescience.org/
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Will The Next MacGyver Be Female?

Will The Next MacGyver Be Female?

By Emilie Lorditch, Inside Science(Inside Science) – When I was in elementary school, I couldn't wait to get home to watch my favorite TV show, "3-2-1 Contact." Watching that show, I learned that science was fun and part of my everyday life. Seeing young women on the show – who were like older sisters that I wished I had – I believed that I could be a scientist too.

Naming Game Theory Shows How Zealots Sway Popular Opinion

Naming Game Theory Shows How Zealots Sway Popular Opinion

By Ker Than, 
Inside Science
(Inside Science) -- Opinions rarely form in a vacuum. People are heavily influenced by the opinions of others in their social networks, whether they be real or virtual. Some people are not open to new ideas. These are the zealots, who proselytize an opinion -- the superiority of Apple products, for example, or skepticism about climate change -- in the hopes of convincing others, while stubbornly resisting being influenced themselves.

Will Brain Images And Thoughts Be Protected Under The 4th And 5th Amendments?

Will Brain Images And Thoughts Be Protected Under The 4th And 5th Amendments?

Credit: Jon Olav Eikenes, CC-BY-SABy: Carrie Peyton Dahlberg, Inside Science(Inside Science) - Brain imaging can already pull bits of information from the minds of willing volunteers in laboratories. What happens when police or lawyers want to use it to pry a key fact from the mind of an unwilling person?Will your brain be protected under the U.S. Constitution's Fourth Amendment from unreasonable search and seizure?  

Organic Milk Offers No Nutritional Boost Over Regular Milk

Organic Milk Offers No Nutritional Boost Over Regular Milk

By Leigh Cooper, Inside Science(Inside Science) – Two bottles of whole milk sit side-by-side in a supermarket refrigerator. One costs $3.46 per gallon while the other costs $7.08 per gallon. The difference? The second bottle of milk is labeled organic.

Citrus Fruit And Tea May Reduce Ovarian Cancer Risk

Citrus Fruit And Tea May Reduce Ovarian Cancer Risk

By:  Karin Heineman, Inside Science(Inside Science TV) – Shelley Tworoger, an epidemiologist at Brigham and Women's Hospital located in Boston, Massachusetts studied ovarian cancer."This is one of the largest and oldest cohort studies in the world. We followed over 230,000 women over several decades and every two years they answered questionnaires about their lifestyle and health, in particular we asked them every 4 years to report back to us the kinds of foods that they eat. We used this information to look at what women ate and we followed them up to see who got ovarian cancer and who didn't," said Tworoger.   

Ultralight Material Can Hold 100,000 Times Its Own Weight

Ultralight Material Can Hold 100,000 Times Its Own Weight

By: Marsha Lewis, Inside Science(Inside Science TV) – They may look flimsy, but the materials printed with 3-D printing technology are one-of-a-kind, light-weight and super-strong.Materials engineers at LLNL have created a material with a special 3-D printer that mixes hard metal, tough ceramics and flexible plastics.“It can hold more than 100,000-times its own weight. In fact, even more than that," said Chris Spadaccini, a materials engineer at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California.“One of the benefits of this methodology is the ability to work with a wide range of materials," said Josh Kuntz, a materials engineer at LLNL.

Brown-Headed Cowbirds And The Not-So-Great Escape

Brown-Headed Cowbirds And The Not-So-Great Escape

By: Leigh Cooper,  Inside Science(Inside Science) – Despite their agility in flight, birds often find themselves unable to escape vehicles – a conundrum that puzzles scientists.To solve the mystery, a new study brought brown-headed cowbirds (Molothrus ater) into a homemade, bird-sized movie theater where they watched videos of an approaching truck. The cowbirds eyeballed the gap between themselves and the car to evaluate the danger of the approaching vehicle, but they did not take into account how fast the truck closed that distance.

DNA Trax: Spray-On DNA Barcode Tracks Harmful Chemicals

DNA Trax: Spray-On DNA Barcode Tracks Harmful Chemicals

By Marsha Lewis, Inside Science(Inside Science TV) – Everything from food, to air to water runs the risk of becoming contaminated. Now, chemists at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California have developed a technology that can detect and track dangerous particles in food and in the air.“The DNA in the material can be used to identify those particles," said George Farquar, a chemist at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.With the technology, called DNA Trax, researchers create tiny sugar-based particles and label them with a unique DNA signature. The particles can be sprayed onto food or released into the air to track the source of contaminants.

Physics Or Chemistry? Does Dust Create The Seeds Of Precipitation In Clouds?

Physics Or Chemistry? Does Dust Create The Seeds Of Precipitation In Clouds?

Image: Jeff Kubina via flickr, CC BY BY Jyoti Madhusoodanan, Inside Science (Inside Science) -- Showers fall to Earth’s surface as rain, snow, sleet or hail. But high in the clouds, water molecules often begin to come together as tiny ice crystals that form around miniscule particles of dust. The microscopic crystals are big players in creating rain and lightning, and also heat and cool the planet by bouncing sunlight off clouds.