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      Robert Matthews

      Contributor
      Location

      Articles

      Why oil investors should have listened to Minsky

      The price of oil seems to have stabilised – yet experts on the industry warn that this very stability could lead to speculation and a subsequent crash. Economist Hyman Minsky warned that markets have a habit of creating their own instability but was ignored, Robert Matthews writes

      BusinessApril 19, 2014
      A Spitzer Space Telescope image from 2010 shows a young black hole. Now, scientists probing from the Antarctic say they have evidence of the effects of gravitational waves on microwave signals from the Big Bang. AFP / Nasa
      Did force field lead to the Big Bang?

      It’s the biggest mystery of the universe … how it all began. Now it looks as if scientists studying patterns left by gravitational waves in cosmic microwave radiation are closing in on what type of event inflated the cosmos faster than the speed of light, Robert Matthews writes

      UAEMarch 22, 2014
      How a form of carbon could mean safe drinking water for the whole world

      Chemists think they may have found a material able to make seawater drinkable.

      UAEMarch 08, 2014
      Despite countless warnings, surveys suggest that about 80 per cent of the passwords we use are virtually hopeless.
      Better passwords the key to safer cybersecurity

      Once the preserve of spies and their masters, cryptology – the science of keeping secrets – now affects us all.

      UAEFebruary 22, 2014
      The red area shows part of the central equatorial Pacific Ocean in which water levels are about 10 centimetres higher than normal. This area contrasts with the Gulf of Alaska, where sea levels, in blue, are between 5 and 13cm below normal. This helps to illustrate the increasingly complicated picture that is emerging of global cycles of cooling and warming, and the effects they are having on climate change predictions and debate. Courtesy Nasa / JPL
      Halt in global warming is a hot topic

      Climate-change sceptics often point to statistics that show global temperatures stopped rising 15 years ago. But it is only one element of many in a complex, interlinked system of meteorological processes that we are only beginning to understand.

      UAEFebruary 09, 2014
      Picture capturing the phenomenon of ball lightning being created. Photo Courtesy USAF
      Scientists show ball lightning is not a myth

      Some scientists doubted ball lightning even existed until it was caught on film by a team from China. What causes the phenomenon is still up for debate, writes Robert Matthews .

      UAEJanuary 26, 2014
      This giant dragon skull on a beach in Britain was a publicity stunt for the TV show Game of Thrones – but could the real thing exist? blinkbox / REX
      The science behind The Hobbit’s fiery dragon

      Scientist Robert Matthews discusses the plausibility of whether a dragon, like the one seen in the new Hobbit movie, could actually fly.

      UAEDecember 28, 2013
      Boys tackle a maths problem in an all-boys class at a Shanghai high school in China. Shanghai’s school system produces the world’s top test-scorers. PeterParks / AFP
      Why the Pisa tests may not show the right way forward for education in the UAE

      Set up in 2000 by the Organisation of Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), Pisa is a triennial test of the abilities of more than half a million 15 year olds across 65 countries.

      EducationDecember 15, 2013
      FILE - In this Feb. 15, 2013 file photo provided by Chelyabinsk.ru, shows a meteorite contrail over the Ural Mountains' city of Chelyabinsk, about 930 miles east of Moscow, Russia. After a surprise meteor hit Earth at 42,000 mph and exploded over a Russian city in February, smashing windows and causing minor injuries, scientists studying the aftermath say the threat of space rocks hurtling toward our planet is bigger than they had thought. Meteors like the one that exploded over Chelyabinsk _ and those that are even bigger and more dangerous _ are probably four to five times more likely to hit Earth than scientists thought before the February mid-air explosion, according to three studies released Wednesday in the journals Nature and Science. (AP Photo/Chelyabinsk.ru, Yekaterina Pustynnikova, File)
      12,500-tonne wake-up call

      The Chelyabinsk event highlighted the inadequacies of current methods for spotting space objects before they strike Earth and the importance of commoners' observations to science.

      UAENovember 16, 2013
      Comet ISON hurtling toward the Sun at a whopping 48,000 miles per hour is captured in this time-lapse image made from a sequence of pictures taken on May 8, 2013, by NASA's Hubble Space Telescope. Astronomers fear this could be disastrous for the comet, which is likely to be torn apart by the combined forces of the sun’s heat and gravity field. Reuters
      Astronomers brace for Comet ISON’s close brush with the Sun

      Astronomers predict that Comet ISON will shoot past the sun barely 700,000km above its surface, a hair’s breadth by astronomical standards - and this may well prove disastrous for the comet.

      UAENovember 02, 2013
      Sandra Bullock in Gravity, a film that demonstrates how vulnerable humans are to the forces of nature outside of their natural environment. AP Photo
      Science is scary when it works

      We are not used to dealing with pure physics. So when we are confronted with raw, merciless forces in space, they can be utterly terrifying.

      UAEOctober 19, 2013
      The science of winning a noble prize
      UAEOctober 12, 2013
      Obesity has been proven to cause health problems, but just being a bit overweight may not be all that bad. Tim Sloan / AFP
      Being chubby has its benefits

      The numbers are in on obesity, and the results might shock you: slightly overweight people have a lower mortality rate than those with a healthy body mass index.

      UAESeptember 08, 2013
      Rainfall in Dubai is rare enough but is almost unheard of in August, so the downpour after a cloud-seeding experiment seemed a success – yet scientists are working on a computer model to test the results further. Sarah Dea /The National
      UAE weather: Scientist behind August showers rains on his own parade

      This month’s cloud-seeding experiments seemed to produce the anticipated rain – but the man behind it, Omar Alyazeedi, is hardly shouting it from the rooftops.

      EnvironmentAugust 25, 2013
      Pupils at Repton School plant trees at their school campus in Dubai. A project to plant trees on “carbon farms” in the desert could bring more rainfall to the area and absorb tonnes of atmospheric carbon dioxide. Pawan Singh / The National
      Carbon farming: UAE deserts ideal for saving the earth

      Hot, dry coastal regions such as the UAE may actually be ideal for a technique scientists are calling "carbon farming".

      UAEAugust 11, 2013
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