Firearm Access Associated With Suicide Risk For U.S. Soldiers

Posted on Categories Discover MagazineLeave a comment on Firearm Access Associated With Suicide Risk For U.S. Soldiers

(Credit: Bumble Dee/Shutterstock) Since 2004, the rate of death by suicide has exceeded that of death by combat injury for American soldiers. A review of more than 100 cases involving the suicide of an active-duty soldier found a significant association between firearm ownership, access and usage patterns and increased risk of suicide. The study, published today in the open-access, online-only journal JAMA Network Open, conducted psychological autopsies of 135 U.S. soldiers who committed ...read more

Particle Colliders Help Prep Humans For Deep Space Radiation

Posted on Categories Discover MagazineLeave a comment on Particle Colliders Help Prep Humans For Deep Space Radiation

Particle accelerators provide a way for scientists to test cosmic ray strength particles in labs on Earth. (Credit: GSI GmbH/Jan Michael Hosan 2018) NASA astronaut Scott Kelly spent a year in space while scientists monitored changes in his body, as well as that of his twin, Mark Kelly, who remained on the ground. Kelly came back to Earth in good shape, the experiment showed. And, some Russian cosmonauts have also spent even longer than Kelly in space without obvious long term ill effect from ...read more

The Mystery of Cosmic Cold Spots Just Got Even Weirder

Posted on Categories Discover MagazineLeave a comment on The Mystery of Cosmic Cold Spots Just Got Even Weirder

Recent analysis of Planck data upholds mysteries that have existed since the spacecraft’s first results in 2013. (Credit: ESA/Planck Collaboration) During its time in orbit, the European Space Agency's Planck spacecraft gave humanity the most sophisticated measurements ever made of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) radiation, the first flash of light that rippled across the universe after the Big Bang. Plank told us the shape of the universe and confirmed crucial components of the B ...read more

Methane Levels Are Rising, and Scientists Don’t Know Why

Posted on Categories Discover MagazineLeave a comment on Methane Levels Are Rising, and Scientists Don’t Know Why

Though researchers don't know why methane levels are currently rising, the fossil fuel industry was likely to blame in the past. (Credit: Nick Stubbs/Shutterstock) Carbon dioxide is climate change’s villainous star. But methane, an even more potent greenhouse gas, is CO2’s lesser-known evil twin. Researchers now find methane levels in the atmosphere are on an escalating upward trend. That’s a problem because emission scenarios that limit global warming to 2 degrees Celsius a ...read more

Your Bad Day Is Probably Stressing Out Your Pup, Too

Posted on Categories Discover MagazineLeave a comment on Your Bad Day Is Probably Stressing Out Your Pup, Too

Your stress may be contagious to your dog. (Credit: Klymenok Olena/Shutterstock) A knowing glance. A paw on your arm. A lick on the cheek. Most dog owners can recall a time when they were feeling down. And somehow, their dog just knew something was wrong and responded with a loving gesture. Many dog lovers have long believed that canines are able to sense human emotions. And, a growing body of evidence on the emotional connection between man and his best friend adds weight to these heart ...read more

New Approach to CRISPR Could Yield Even Better Gene Editing

Posted on Categories Discover MagazineLeave a comment on New Approach to CRISPR Could Yield Even Better Gene Editing

(Credit: science photo/Shutterstock) When researchers edit genes with CRISPR today, their systems chop a strand of DNA in half before inserting a new gene and allowing a cell's natural healing mechanisms to patch the strand back up. That technique works well overall, but it can lead to errors, and the success rate varies depending on the type of cell. Scientists have been on the hunt for better versions of CRISPR for years. Now, a new protein that can insert custom genes into DNA witho ...read more

SNAPSHOT: This 500-year-old Artifact Rescued From a Portuguese Shipwreck is the Oldest of its Kind

Posted on Categories Discover MagazineLeave a comment on SNAPSHOT: This 500-year-old Artifact Rescued From a Portuguese Shipwreck is the Oldest of its Kind

(Credit: David Mearns) In 1503, a storm sank the Portuguese ship Esmeralda off the southeastern coast of the Arabian Peninsula, taking the lives of the crew. In 2014, divers and archaeologists returned to the wreck to retrieve what remained. That included this metal disk, thought to be an astrolabe — an instrument that mariners used to navigate by measuring the height of celestial bodies above the horizon. Two features of the Portuguese flag — the coat of arms and an armillary ...read more

Americans Consume More Than 70,000 Microplastic Particles Every Year

Posted on Categories Discover MagazineLeave a comment on Americans Consume More Than 70,000 Microplastic Particles Every Year

(Credit: DEREVYA/Shutterstock) Plastics are everywhere, from our phones to our cars to our utensils. Now researchers find they're inside our bodies as well. Americans consume more than 70,000 microplastic particles every year, a new study says. That sounds like a lot, but that number is still likely an underestimate, the researchers say. The consequences to human health are largely unknown. “The results of our study support the concept that we are living in a ‘plastic environme ...read more

Engineers Craft New Plan to Unstick NASA’s Mars InSight Lander

Posted on Categories Discover MagazineLeave a comment on Engineers Craft New Plan to Unstick NASA’s Mars InSight Lander

Engineers hope the real InSight on Mars can use its robotic arm to help the mole start digging again, a test that has succeeded with replica instruments on Earth. (Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech) The digging instrument on NASA’s Mars InSight lander has been stuck since February 28, and engineers have been hard at work trying to get it moving again. The problem is with its Heat Flow and Physical Properties Package, or HP3, and specifically the part known as the mole, which auto-hammers its way ...read more

Researchers Create Algorithm That Predicts Hollywood Success or Failure

Posted on Categories Discover MagazineLeave a comment on Researchers Create Algorithm That Predicts Hollywood Success or Failure

(Credit: Everett Collection/Copyright 20th Century Fox) In the cutthroat Hollywood film industry, is it possible to know if an actor’s career is about to boom or bust? In many cases, yes. Researchers from Queen Mary University in London created an algorithm that can predict with 85 percent accuracy whether a star’s golden years have passed or are still yet to come. In a study published June 4 in the open-access journal Nature Communications, scientists analyzed the profil ...read more

Page 712 of 1,079« First...102030...710711712713714...720730740...Last »