July 2008 in science

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July 31 2008 (Thursday)

  • Phoenix has confirmed water on Mars when ice accidentally managed to get into an oven. At 32°C water molecules were detected as the ice melted. Higher temperature tests can be done to look for carbon compounds and the signs of life. (AP)

July 29 2008 (Tuesday)

July 28 2008 (Monday)

July 25 2008 (Friday)

  • Code taking advantage of a weakness in the Domain Name System is circulating online, permitting phishing gangs to redirect an infected computer to any website they wish without the users knowledge. (BBC)
  • Microsoft researchers have miniaturized telescopic optics for a new display that allows 36 percent of the backlight through – liquid crystal displays (LCD) are only 10 percent – and is six times faster than LCD. (IEEE)
  • China surpasses the United States online citizens with 253 million by the end of June, an increase of 56 percent from last year. (AHN)
  • Google has indexed over 1 trillion web pages on the internet for the first time. (GoogleBlog)

July 24 2008 (Thursday)

  • Google opens Knol to the public after a 7-month trial. Articles are written by a known author and can earn money with more views. (ABC)
  • Scientists reveal magnetic explosions approximately one-third of the way to the moon are the likely cause of the northern lights movement. (AP)
  • Advanced thermoelectrics may permit a 10 percent fuel savings for cars by removing the need for an alternator and generating electricity from exhaust heat. (TechReview)

July 22 2008 (Tuesday)

July 21 2008 (Monday)

  • Scientists have created a way to make an antifreeze protein that Canadian snow fleas use to survive winter temperatures. This could result in better organ preservation and smoother ice cream. (Physorg)

July 17 2008 (Thursday)

  • A study comparing a traditional low-fat diet, Mediterranean diet and low-carb diets found the low-carb was most effective for men and lowered cholesterol levels; contradicting conventional wisdom. (Physorg)
  • Researchers control the position one electron in circuit and can make it be in two places at the same time. This could facilitate the creation of a practical quantum computer. (TechReview)
  • Materials scientists have confirmed that graphene is the strongest material ever tested and resistant to heat. Providing further evidence it is an ideal material for future computers. (TechReview)

July 16 2008 (Wednesday)

July 15 2008 (Tuesday)

July 14 2008 (Monday)

July 11 2008 (Friday)

  • The iPhone 3G launches internationally, but many users become frustrated as full activation is not possible because of an iTunes server glitch. (AP)
  • Cosmonauts successfully extract an explosive bolt from the Soyuz capsule on the ISS during a six hour spacewalk. This was done as part of the ballistic reentry investigation. (BBC)
  • MIT researchers make colored glass efficiently redirect light to the edges of the pane where it can be converted into electricity. This reduces the cost of the solar panel and permits standard windows to be converted into solar arrays. (CNet)

July 10 2008 (Thursday)

  • Wikipedia will host the Gene Wiki which will create stubs of all human genes for future collaboration between scientists and online community. (ITNews)
  • Evidence from volcanic glass recovered from the moon decades ago has revealed elements of water, challenging the dominant notion the moon is perfectly dry. (Reuters)

July 9 2008 (Wednesday)

July 8 2008 (Tuesday)

  • Researchers at University of California have developed a nanoparticles/anti-cancer-drug "smart bomb" to specifically target metastasis in mouse pancreatic and kidney cancer. It permits using 15 times less chemotherapy drugs during treatment. (EurekAlert)

July 7 2008 (Monday)

July 4 2008 (Friday)

July 3 2008 (Thursday)

References