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The Conversation

Why the Deep Space Atomic Clock is key for future space exploration

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageDSAC is prepping for a yearlong experiment to characterize and test its suitability for use in future deep space exploration.Jet Propulsion Laboratory, CC BY

We all intuitively understand the basics of time. Every day we count its passage and use it to schedule our lives.

We also use time to navigate our way to the destinations that matter to us. In...

Read more: Why the Deep Space Atomic Clock is key for future space exploration

Three female scholars react to Hillary Clinton's historic nomination

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

On June 7, Hillary Clinton won enough pledged delegates to win nomination as the Democratic presidential candidate, the first woman to do so. Three prominent scholars of U.S. electoral politics react.

The importance of treating women well

Valerie M. Hudson, Texas A&M University

As an American woman, I am proud to tell my sons and daughters that...

Read more: Three female scholars react to Hillary Clinton's historic nomination

How fish and clean water can protect coral reefs from warming oceans

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

Hurricanes and waterspouts. Bone-chilling rain and 100 degree Fahrenheit temperatures. Jellyfish and fire coral stings. Broken toes, shoulders, knees and fingers. Entanglements in fishing gear and stranded boats. Cockroaches, mosquitoes and sandflies. Hundreds of SCUBA dives and thousands of hours underwater. And to end it all, mountains of very...

Read more: How fish and clean water can protect coral reefs from warming oceans

How the Antiquities Act has expanded the national park system and fueled struggles over land protection

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageCliff Palace at Mesa Verde National Park, Colorado, built by Anasazi c. 1200. The Antiquities Act was passed to protect such sites from looters.National Park Service

As Americans anticipate summer vacation, many are planning trips to our nation’s iconic national parks, such as the Grand Canyon, Zion, Acadia and Olympic. But they may not...

Read more: How the Antiquities Act has expanded the national park system and fueled struggles over land...

Rules change, new voters mean an unpredictable primary day in California

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

Three months after Super Tuesday, the presidential primary is finally coming to California.

That the Democratic Party still has two candidates in the race this late in the game reflects a highly divided base across the country. In votes from New Hampshire to Puerto Rico, Democratic voters have proven they are tremendously diverse, both in terms of...

Read more: Rules change, new voters mean an unpredictable primary day in California

What are septic shock and sepsis? The facts behind these deadly conditions

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageICU image via www.shutterstock.com.

Most Americans have never heard of it, but according to recent federal data, sepsis is the most expensive cause of hospitalization in the U.S., and is now the most common cause of ICU admission among older Americans.

Sepsis is a complication of infection that leads to organ failure. More than one million patients a...

Read more: What are septic shock and sepsis? The facts behind these deadly conditions

More Articles ...

  1. Is it time to break with colonial legacy of zoos?
  2. The Puerto Rican primary matters. Here's why
  3. Stories of vaccine-related harms are influential, even when people don't believe them
  4. We’re (not) running out of water -- a better way to measure water scarcity
  5. Obsessed with reality TV? You may be a narcissist
  6. Why young people aren't keeping up: from the Joneses to the Kardashians
  7. Why are public colleges and universities enrolling too many out-of-state students?
  8. Limiting access to payday loans may do more harm than good
  9. Weak jobs report shows we need a president with a plan, but it's too soon to panic
  10. Google wins in court, and so does losing party Oracle
  11. Gorilla’s death calls for human responsibility, not animal personhood
  12. Is OPEC's oil era over?
  13. Moving beyond pro/con debates over genetically engineered crops
  14. Using lasers to make data storage faster than ever
  15. Why music lessons need to keep up with the times
  16. What is chronic pain and why is it hard to treat?
  17. The women who are taking on Wal-Mart
  18. The limits of intellectual reason in our understanding of the natural world
  19. The strongest bones on the planet hold important clues
  20. Beyond Asimov: how to plan for ethical robots
  21. Accurate science or accessible science in the media – why not both?
  22. Why high school stays with us forever
  23. Brazil: no longer the country of the future?
  24. Is the spelling bee success of Indian-Americans a legacy of British colonialism?
  25. Why are fewer people getting married?
  26. What the new overtime rules mean for you and your boss
  27. In America, domestic extremists are a bigger risk than foreign terrorism
  28. Unlocking the secrets of bacterial biofilms – to use against them
  29. Perspectives on antibiotic resistance: how we got here, where we're headed
  30. Explainer: how campus policies limit free speech
  31. Inside ISIS' looted antiquities trade
  32. In 2015, more people committed suicide in U.S. jails than over the last decade
  33. Should prostitution be decriminalized?
  34. Why it's easier to be prescribed an opioid painkiller than the treatment for opioid addiction
  35. Science communication training should be about more than just how to transmit knowledge
  36. How much money is ISIS actually making from looted art?
  37. How computing power can help us look deep within our bodies, and even the Earth
  38. Cities can prepare for hurricane season by reforming shortsighted and outdated laws
  39. Sometimes the best medicine for a veteran is the company of another veteran
  40. The backwards history of attitudes toward public breastfeeding
  41. Security risks in the age of smart homes
  42. Starting college? Here's why you should think about a gap year
  43. Restoring the Everglades will benefit both humans and nature
  44. Does billionaire-funded lawsuit against Gawker create playbook for punishing press?
  45. The trillion dollar question Obama left unanswered in Hiroshima
  46. Facial expressions are key to first impressions. What does that mean for people with facial paralysis?
  47. Iran's Rouhani may now control parliament, but do his economic reforms stand a chance?
  48. Finding solitude in an era of perpetual contact
  49. Recreating forests of the past isn't enough to fix our wildfire problems
  50. Is a tuition-free policy enough to ensure college success?