Rubbery Glass, Zero-Gravity Life and More: Scientific American’s March Issue
More In This Article
HPV Cancers in Men Take Off
Fewer People are Calling Poison Control Centers
Rubbery Glass Arrives
Clever Bird Uses Nature as its Breadbox
Sorry State: U.S.’s Nuclear Reactor Fleet Dwindles
Annoying Refrigerator Noises Become Less Mysterious
Alien Life Prefers Circles
Cockroaches Accumulate Light to See in the Dark
In Case You Missed It: Need-to-Know News from around the World
Nature vs. Nurture vs. NASA
NASA’s Messenger Mission to Mercury Nears End
HPV is the most widespread sexually transmitted disease in the U.S. and abroad, yet many people still go unvaccinated—especially men. Current HPV vaccination campaigns focus largely on women’s risk for cervical cancer but researchers have recently connected HPV to a surge in head and neck cancer in younger men. Experts suggest a push for male vaccination to decrease HPV-caused cancers in both sexes.
Nuclear power, which is also considered a cancer risk by some, is already on the decline in the U.S. With the closure of the Vermont Yankee reactor, the nation’s fleet now numbers under 100. As reactors go offline without replacements, the country will be increasingly reliant on natural gas and old, flawed reactor designs.
According to lore, cockroaches will be one of the few survivors of a nuclear winter—but that’s not their only supertrait. Scientists have found that cockroaches’ incredible night vision works like time-lapse photography, building an image photon by photon. Understanding how they do it could lead to better night vision for mankind.
Humans report worse vision while in space as well as headaches and myriad other health effects from living in zero gravity. In March NASA plans to send one member of an identical twin astronaut duo to the International Space Station to investigate the influence microgravity conditions have on DNA expression, the microbiome, cellular aging and more.
Also in March’s Advances:
- A new glass can stretch and shrink like rubber.
- Calls to poison control centers are dropping.
- Birds hide seeds where they are unlikely to sprout so they can be used later for meals.
- Solar systems with circular orbits and many planets have higher chances of harboring life.
- Turkish researchers have located the source of those strange popping and cracking noises in refrigerators.
- MESSENGER, NASA’s Mercury orbiter, will conclude its mission after four years gathering data at the closest planet to the sun.
- In news from around the world: Irish households get their own postal codes; the Large Hadron Collider is back in action; a solar-powered airplane prepares to circumnavigate the world; and more.
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