Science & Technology
The latest research findings, which involved significant contributions from physicists at the University of Melbourne, have been recently published in the prestigious journal Nature.
The paper reveals that investigation into the process of B-meson decays has given insight into why there is more matter than antimatter in the universe.
Christoffer Karoff and Hans Kjeldsen of the University of Aarhus say that these outbursts in the Sun's outer layers drive oscillations throughout the Sun "in the same way that the entire Earth is set ringing for several weeks after a major earthquake."
This possibility was first proposed in the 1970s, but has not been demonstrated until now. "It's the first observational evidence of this that I'm aware of," says Günter Houdek, a solar physicist at the University of Cambridge in England who was not involved with the work.
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| ©Unknown |
| The quakes caused by flares should be visible on other stars. |
Spanish palaeontologists have dug up the remains of a 1.2-million-year-old humanlike inhabitant of Western Europe. The fossil find shows that members of our genus, Homo , colonized this region far earlier than many experts had thought.
The primitive hominin - represented by just a fragment of jawbone bearing a handful of wobbly-looking teeth - lived in what is now the Sierra de Atapuerca region of northern Spain, an area already known as a treasure trove of early human remains.
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| ©EIA/Jordi Mestre |
| The petite jaw suggests the oldest-found European was probably female. |
"A completely unexpected surprise is that the chemistry of Enceladus, what's coming out from inside, resembles that of a comet," says Hunter Waite of the Southwest Research Institute, principal investigator for the Cassini Ion and Neutral Mass Spectrometer. "To have primordial material coming out from inside a Saturn moon raises many questions on the formation of the Saturn system."
Toddlers, primates and even birds have been known to solve problems by applying rules learned from experience in a new context, but some scientists have argued that other non-primates lack this rudimentary skill.
But in a paper in the journal Science, British researchers at University College London and Oxford University reported that rats also have some capacity for abstract thought.
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| ©AFP/File/Alexander Joe |
| An African rat. Rats can learn rules and apply them to new situations, an ability which is thought to be a keystone of human thought, according to a study released Thursday. |
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| ©Unknown |
| Alan Stern |
The 10-second clip of a woman singing "Au Clair de la Lune," taken from a so-called phonautogram, was recently discovered by audio historian David Giovannoni. The recording predates Thomas Edison's "Mary had a little lamb" - previously credited as the oldest recorded voice - by 17 years.
"This is possibly the most detailed understanding of how any virus matures," said study author Michael Rossmann of Purdue University in Indiana.
How long do you think it was buried? Do you think it's male or female? How did they get it back to camp? And the pervasive thought: I don't think we should touch it. He could have died of smallpox.
A white dwarf is a star that is "dying," cooling down in the twilight of its life. It's what the sun will become in about 4 billion years, according to Provencal.
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| ©University of Delaware |
| A white dwarf is in the center of planetary nebula NGC6751. Near the ring of gas is a foreground star. |









