Science & Technology
People who are left-handed are more likely to get anxious or feel shy or embarrassed about doing or saying what they want, according to new research. Those involved in the Abertay University study were given a behavioural test that gauges personal restraint and impulsiveness.
Researchers found left-handers tended to agree more with statements such as "I worry about making mistakes." They also agreed that "criticism or scolding hurts me quite a bit." In total, 46 left-handed people were compared with 66 right-handers.

The Astrobotic team's "Artemis Lander" (background) and "Red Rover" (foreground) is one of 10 spacecraft now enrolled to compete in the Google Lunar X PRIZE Cup.
The Pittsburgh, Pennsyvania.-based firm Astrobotic Technology, Inc., led by Carnegie Mellon University roboticist William "Red" Whittaker, announced plans to launch its first rover to NASA's Tranquility Base in May 2010 to win the Google Lunar X Prize competition, the company announced Thursday.

A trough carved by erosion in Mars' north polar region. The conical mound indicates a buried crater underneath the ice-rich soil.
Around the red planet's north pole is a feature called the north polar layered deposits, which are a series of ice-rich layers deposited over time and up to several kilometers thick.
The new images from MRO's High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) camera revealed an odd, solitary hill rising part-way down an eroding slope of the layered terrain.
The exposed section of the deposits is about 1,640 feet (500 meters) thick, and the conical mound is about 130 feet (40 meters) high.

This undated image from the Hubble Space Telescope shows a ghostly ring of dark matter in a galaxy cluster designated Cl 0024+17.
The findings published in the journal Nature move researchers a step closer to unraveling the mystery of the substance that makes up most of the universe, said Carlos Frenk, a cosmologist at Durham University in Britain.
"Discovering what dark matter is, is one of the most fundamental questions scientists can ask," Frenk, who worked on the study, said in a telephone interview.
Unlike most such instruments, where the whole telescope moves to follow the object being studied in the sky, the Chinese design features a fixed structure and two moveable, segmented mirrors.
Rather than the traditional dome shape employed for most large telescopes, China's new instrument looks like a large, white, skewed pi symbol.

Physicists are creating ice films in cold conditions similar to outer space and observe the detailed molecular organization.
Researchers have been surprised by some of the results, not least by the sheer beauty of some of the images created, according to Julyan Cartwright, a specialist in ice structures at the Andalusian Institute for Earth Sciences (IACT) of the Spanish Research Council (CSIC) and the University of Granada in Spain.
Recent discoveries about the structure of ice films in astrophysical conditions at the mesoscale, which is the size just above the molecular level, were discussed at a recent workshop organised by the European Science Foundation (ESF) and co-chaired by Cartwright alongside C. Ignacio Sainz-Diaz, also from the IACT. As Cartwright noted, many of the discoveries about ice structures at low temperatures were made possible by earlier research into industrial applications involving deposits of thin films upon an underlying substrate (ie the surface, such as a rock, to which the film is attached), such as manufacture of ceramics and semiconductors. In turn the study of ice films could lead to insights of value in such industrial applications.
Magnetic fields above sunspot 1007 erupted yesterday, Nov. 3rd, sparking a B8-class solar flare. Although B-flares are considered minor, the blast nevertheless made itself felt on Earth. X-rays bathed the dayside of our planet and sent a wave of ionization rippling through the atmosphere over Europe. The sudden ionospheric disturbance (SID) disrupted propagation of VLF radio signals, a phenomenon recorded by Rudolf Slosiar of Bojnice, Slovakia:
The Taurid meteors - so named because they appear to emanate from the constellation Taurus - are the streamed remains of a disintegrated comet which "probably coalesced into a cluster due to gravitational tugs from Jupiter", as New Scientist puts it.
This cluster orbits the Sun every 3.4 years, so we don't always pass through it. But this year we're making a "glancing pass" of the debris; this began in October and will peak this month. The Taurids don't entertain with as many meteors as the Leonids or Perseids, but this time around they might offer around 20 burn-ups per hour.
The night of 5 November is reckoned to be the best bet, since the 12th is an almost full Moon. Northern hemisphere skywatchers will get the best view, although their southern hemisphere counterparts can take advantage of three to five hours of activity "around midnight on Wednesday, when the constellation Taurus is above the horizon".
''One thing that really is astonishing is the variability between individuals, and also between hands on the same individual,'' said University of Colorado biochemistry assistant professor Rob Knight, a co-author of the paper.
''The sheer number of bacteria species detected on the hands of the study participants was a big surprise, and so was the greater diversity of bacteria we found on the hands of women,'' added lead researcher Noah Fierer, an assistant professor in Colorado's department of ecology and evolutionary biology.






