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fromBig Think
45 minutes ago

Is our first "galaxy-quasar hybrid" also a Little Red Dot?

Deep, wide, multiwavelength observations reveal two main distant object types—galaxies and quasars—and over 300 "Little Red Dot" galaxy–quasar hybrids.
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fromPsychology Today
18 hours ago

Baboons: Long-Term Research Reveals Who They Really Are

Baboons exhibit unexpected complex strategies of negotiation, collaboration, and resilience, revealing a sophisticated nonhuman society and challenging myths of violent simplicity.
fromFuturism
19 hours ago

Mysterious Spot in Earth's Magnetic Field Now Growing Rapidly

The South Atlantic Anomaly is not just a single block,
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#jpl
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fromwww.theguardian.com
17 hours ago

Readers reply: what is the most common word in the world?

The definite article 'the' is the most common English word; word frequency varies widely across languages and modes of communication.
fromwww.aljazeera.com
1 day ago

Pakistan launches its first hyperspectral satellite

Hyperspectral satellites can detect subtle chemical or material changes on the ground that traditional satellites cannot, making them especially useful for things like tracking crop quality, water resources or damage from natural disasters. Pakistan's Ministry of Foreign Affairs said the technology is expected to significantly enhance national capacities in fields like precision agriculture, environmental monitoring, urban planning and disaster management.
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fromFuturism
20 hours ago

We're Only Slightly Exaggerating When We Say This Footage of a Fusion Experiment Will Melt Your Face Off

Tokamak experiments show hydrogen plasma hotter than the Sun's core trapped by powerful magnetic fields, with visible-edge emissions and lithium injection effects.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
20 hours ago

Bonobos transformed how we think about animal societies. Can we save the last of the hippy apes'?

Bonobos live on the Congo River's left bank; they have female-dominated, comparatively peaceful societies and face threats from poaching and deforestation.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Italian blasphemy and German ingenuity: how swear words differ around the world

Taboo vocabulary sizes and types vary widely across languages, revealing cultural values, social boundaries, and differing norms around offensive and gendered language.
fromFuturism
18 hours ago

Astronomers Ponder Strange Glow Coming From the Heart of Our Galaxy

Now, a new paper published in the journal Physical Review Letters might not have a satisfying answer - it argues that both theories are equally likely - but it does raise the stakes: if the first possibility turns out to be correct, it could be the first-ever concrete evidence that dark matter, the mysterious stuff that is believed to make up more than 26 percent of the universe, actually exists.
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fromFuturism
15 hours ago

Startup Reveals "Space Armor" to Protect Astronauts From Elon Musk's Orbital Trash

Commercial satellite proliferation has dramatically increased orbital debris and collision risk, prompting development of lightweight "space armor" tiles to protect satellites and astronauts.
fromTasting Table
14 hours ago

You Could Have A Genetically High Tolerance To Spicy Food - Tasting Table

While some can inhale foods as hot as ghost peppers, others can barely tolerate a small amount of red peppers sprinkled atop a slice of pizza. And the significant variance in spice tolerance can seem like a mystery, but one's tolerance to heat is about more than grit - it has roots in science. Pepper's spiciness emanates from a compound known as capsaicin, a natural substance that binds to the same receptor in your mouth that detects heat and pain.
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fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Why Quantum Physics Captures the Spiritual Imagination

Quantum field theory's imagery of invisible fields and entanglement often gets repurposed as spiritual symbolism to explain consciousness and extraordinary experiences.
fromFuturism
1 day ago

Woman Surprised When Large Chunk of NASA Equipment Crashes Down From Sky

On an unassuming morning in rural West Texas, a woman named Ann Walter was puzzled whena huge hunk of metal descendedfrom the sky and crash landed in her neighbor's wheat field. There were NASA logos on the parachutes that carried the truck-sized object, which itself bore NASA markings. "It's crazy, because when you're standing on the ground and see something in the air, you don't realize how big it is," Walter told the Associated Press. "It was probably a 30-foot parachute. It was huge."
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#fermi-paradox
fromenglish.elpais.com
2 days ago

Cooperative meerkats, guide ants, and dining-room monitor hens: Animals can teach, too

There are two main reasons. The first is that ethology is a very young discipline. Although humans have always observed animal behavior, and there are records of its study dating back to Aristotle, modern science has been taking this field seriously for less than a century. Therefore, at the beginning of the 2000s, hardly any animal behaviors reminiscent of teaching had been documented.
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fromBig Think
2 days ago

How neuroscience is rewriting the art of war

Human brain processes—fear, stress, risk assessment, and decision-making—critically determine wartime behavior and outcomes and are themselves reshaped by warfare.
fromTasting Table
1 day ago

Can Fridge Magnets Really Raise Your Energy Bill? - Tasting Table

The idea likely took off from a half-understood bit of science: that your favorite souvenirs were creating a magnetic field that was somehow interfering with the fridge's internal sensors or compressor. That the magnets could, in theory, be "confusing" the refrigerator into working harder to maintain its temperature. In reality, though, the magnets on the outside of your fridge are far too weak to penetrate the insulated door or affect the circuits inside.
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fromFuturism
1 day ago

Astronomers Astonished By Twin Cosmic Rings That Dwarf Entire Galaxies

A double-ringed Odd Radio Circle of magnetized plasma, hundreds of thousands of light years across, was detected 7.5 billion years away; its origin is unexplained.
fromwww.latimes.com
1 day ago

Orionid meteor shower will soon be visible over LA. When and where to watch

The Orionid shower is made up of particles from Halley's Comet burning in the atmosphere as Earth's orbit intersects the comet's path, according to NASA. This year, NASA says the view of the meteor shower will be spectacular. The Orionid shower gets its name the constellation Orion, which it appears alongside. For stargazers wondering where to look, Griffith Observatory says to keep your eyes on Orion's raised club.
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fromwww.nature.com
3 days ago
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Author Correction: A room temperature rechargeable all-solid-state hydride ion battery

Jingyao Liu’s first name was misspelled as "Jinyao" and has been corrected in the HTML and PDF versions.
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fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

The Plural Mind: Jane Goodall's Legacy for the AI Age

Intelligence is diverse and plural across species, challenging human-centered hierarchies and urging recognition of multiple cognitive forms when engaging with natural and artificial minds.
fromTheregister
2 days ago

Microsoft uploads NASA's Landsat and Sentinel data to Azure

Microsoft has made NASA's Harmonized Landsat and Sentinel-2 (HLS) dataset available on Azure via the Windows giant's Planetary Computer platform. It seems an excellent use for all that Azure capacity - petabytes of global environmental data can be accessed through APIs or directly via Azure storage. "This flexible scientific environment allows users to answer questions about the data, and both build applications and use applications on top of the platform," Microsoft said.
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fromFuturism
2 days ago

Scientists Invent Room Temperature Ice

Scientists have created a new phase of ice that can form at room temperature. As detailed in a new paper published in the journal Nature Materials, the new phase, dubbed XXI, requires extreme levels of pressure to form. As its name suggests, it's the twenty-first form of ice to have been identified, joining a fascinating array of other structures ranging from hexagonal and cubic to superionic, which can be found on the surface of gas and ice giants like Neptune or Uranus.
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#fusion-energy
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fromHarvard Gazette
2 days ago

Her science writing is not for the squeamish - Harvard Gazette

Mary Roach explores unsettling human-anatomy topics with curiosity that often outweighs disgust, pursuing vivid firsthand encounters and scientific investigation.
fromTheregister
2 days ago

MIT boffins claim to double the precision of atomic clocks

Atomic clocks keep time by monitoring the natural oscillations of atoms as they move between energy states. Each atom oscillates unimaginably fast. Cesium, for instance, vibrates more than 10 billion times every second. By locking lasers (in optical atomic clocks) or microwaves (in "traditional" atomic clocks) to those frequencies, scientists can measure time down to billionths of a second.
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fromNature
3 days ago

Time-resolved fluorescent proteins expand the microscopy palette

Led by Xin Zhang, a chemist at Westlake University in Hangzhou, China, the team designed more than two dozen fluorescent proteins that differ not only by colour, but also in how much time they spend in their excited state - a property called the fluorescence lifetime. The researchers call these molecules time-resolved fluorescent proteins, or tr-FPs. Their findings were published online last month in Cell.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

How a Cosmic Treasure in the Somali Desert Became a Global Controversy

For generations a massive iron meteorite sat in the Somali desert, becoming a landmark where children played and herders sharpened their knives. Then in 2020 a group of armed men arrived to steal it. The El Ali meteorite contains three minerals never before seen naturally on Earth, making it scientifically priceless. But its journey from Somalia to the black market, with some research along the way, raises uncomfortable questions.
Science
fromArs Technica
2 days ago

Hominins suffered lead poisoning starting at least 2 million years ago

Our hominid ancestors faced a Pleistocene world full of dangers-and apparently one of those dangers was lead poisoning. Lead exposure sounds like a modern problem, at least if you define "modern" the way a paleoanthropologist might: a time that started a few thousand years ago with ancient Roman silver smelting and lead pipes. According to a recent study, however, lead is a much more ancient nemesis, one that predates not just the Romans but the existence of our genus Homo.
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fromBig Think
2 days ago

Are we blinded by our desire to find extraterrestrial life?

Many astronomers are really driven by the search for Earth twins because I think deep down the natural endpoint of this whole goal of looking for planets is to answer the question: are we alone? That is a burning itch that I think many of us have our entire lives wanted to answer. I'm sure many of you feel the same way as well. So I think that was what really drives us.
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fromBig Think
3 days ago

Ask Ethan: Is the Hubble tension the same thing as dark energy?

Dark energy and the Hubble tension both stem from observations indicating the Universe's expansion has accelerated in recent cosmic history.
#starship
fromArs Technica
2 days ago

NASA's next Moonship reaches last stop before launch pad

The Orion spacecraft, which will fly four people around the Moon, arrived inside the cavernous Vehicle Assembly Building at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida late Thursday night, ready to be stacked on top of its rocket for launch early next year. The late-night transfer covered about 6 miles (10 kilometers) from one facility to another at the Florida spaceport. NASA and its contractors are continuing preparations for the Artemis II mission after the White House approved the program
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

What Is a Quasar? The Answer Depends on Your Point of View

Some galaxies host extraordinarily energetic cores emitting radio to gamma rays; quasars appear as intensely luminous central points that vastly outshine their fainter host galaxies.
fromThe Mercury News
2 days ago

How to watch the Orionid meteor shower, debris of Halley's comet

The Orionids - one of two major meteor showers caused by remnants from Halley's comet - will peak with the arrival of a new moon, providing an excellent opportunity to see shooting stars without interference from moonlight. During Tuesday morning's peak, expect to see up to 20 meteors per hour in ideal viewing conditions, said Thaddeus LaCoursiere, planetarium program coordinator at the Bell Museum in St. Paul, Minnesota. Viewing lasts until Nov. 7.
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fromWIRED
2 days ago

How to See Comet Lemmon This October

Comet Lemmon (C/2025 A6), a long-period comet, will approach perihelion on November 8, 2025 and may become visible to the naked eye.
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fromNature
5 days ago

Daily briefing: Making babies with lab-grown eggs and sperm

Creation of lab-made sex cells, AI-generated scientific papers and reviews, and US government shutdowns are reshaping research priorities, funding, and ethical debates.
Science
fromSlate Magazine
3 days ago

What Is an Alternate Name for the Condition Called Hyperopia?

Weekday quizzes provide daily, topic-specific challenges; compare scores to the average, share results, and Slate Plus members can track standings on a leaderboard.
Science
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

A Celebratory Wild Ride Through the History of Life on Earth

Earth's evolutionary history spans billions of years, featuring diverse life from Cambrian oddities and Carboniferous giants to synapsids and the rise of humans.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 days ago

After 35 Years, a Solution to the CIA's Kryptos Puzzle Has Been Found

The puzzle, a copper sculpture engraved with four coded messages, has fascinated professional and amateur cryptographers since 1990, when artist Jim Sanborn installed it at the CIA's headquarters in Virginia. The four encrypted messages are made up of 869 characters . The final section, K4, begins with OBKR and contains 97 letters. To claim a solution, one must show how they decoded it from that ciphertext.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 days ago

Two Wrong Strategies Do Make a Right in This Math Paradox

Combining two individually losing stochastic strategies can produce a winning outcome, a paradox with applications in biology and potential cancer therapies.
fromwww.npr.org
3 days ago

'Death fold' proteins can make cells self-destruct. Scientists want to control them

One of these researchers is Randal Halfmann at the Stowers Institute for Medical Research in Kansas City, Missouri. He has been studying immune cells that self-destruct when they come into contact with molecules that present a threat to the body. "They have to somehow recognize that [threat] in this vast array of other complex molecules," he says, "and then within minutes, kill themselves." They do this much the way a soldier might dive on a grenade to save others' lives.
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#spacex
fromWIRED
4 days ago
Science

SpaceX's Second-Gen Starship Signs Off With a Near-Perfect Test Flight

fromWIRED
4 days ago
Science

SpaceX's Second-Gen Starship Signs Off With a Near-Perfect Test Flight

Science
fromFast Company
3 days ago

The Great ShakeOut is here: How to participate in earthquake safety drills happening around the world

Great ShakeOut is an international earthquake-preparedness drill that saves lives by practicing drop, cover, and hold on at 10:16 a.m. local time on October 16.
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Different croaks: new frog and gecko species discovered on remote island in Australia's north

Three new species—a gecko (Nactus simakal) and two microhylid frogs (Choerophyrne koeypad and Callulops gobakula)—were discovered on Dauan Island, Torres Strait.
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fromSFGATE
3 days ago

Earthquake with 3.1 preliminary magnitude jolts Bay Area on Great ShakeOut day

A preliminary magnitude 3.1 earthquake struck 1.2 miles east of Berkeley at 9:23 a.m., producing light shaking across the East Bay and San Francisco.
Science
fromTechCrunch
3 days ago

The real reason Google DeepMind is working with a fusion energy startup | TechCrunch

Commonwealth Fusion Systems is partnering with Google DeepMind to simulate plasma with Torax and apply AI models to optimize operation of the Sparc fusion reactor.
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fromNature
4 days ago

The problem with career planning in science

Research careers can follow many diverse pathways beyond traditional academic trajectories, and leadership can reshape funding systems and support inclusive career initiatives.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Bird migration is changing. What does this reveal about our planet? visualised

Desertas petrels are storm-chasing, long-distance Atlantic migrants breeding only on Bugio Island, numbering about 200 pairs and tracked by GPS revealing their extraordinary routes.
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fromNature
6 days ago

Daily briefing: Could microbe-friendly buildings help us be healthier?

Men's brains show greater age-related volume loss than women's, a Japanese influenza epidemic is underway, and new methods reveal specific olfactory receptor–odorant matches.
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fromNature
5 days ago

The year of the Ghost Ant

A doctoral candidate must discover a new insect species within one year or lose PhD candidacy and be expelled from the Galactic Consortium.
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fromNature
5 days ago

New bird flu vaccine could tackle multiple variants with one shot

A multivalent H5 avian influenza vaccine designed from viral evolutionary data protected animals against diverse H5 strains and could enable pre-pandemic vaccine stockpiles.
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fromNature
5 days ago

How journals can break down barriers for Latin American scientists

Scientists from the global south face funding shortages, language barriers, political instability, systemic bias and extractive 'parachute' science that reduce career visibility and citations.
fromwww.npr.org
4 days ago

Greetings from the Rhone Glacier, where a gash of pink highlights how it's melting

"What do you think would look better: pink or green?" The bubblegum hue won. A scientist from the Swiss public university ETH Zurich nodded, pulling out a bottle of pink dye to release from the top of the Rhone Glacier in the Swiss Alps. Turning the rivulet flowing down a melting glacier into a bright-pink stream was the least scientific test carried out this day.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

Magnifying the minuscule: Nikon Small World photomicrography 2025 in pictures

A diverse array of microscopic life and cellular structures is depicted, spanning insects, algae, fungi, plant pollen, and mammalian cells revealed by high-magnification microscopy.
Science
fromwww.nature.com
5 days ago

Tin-based perovskite solar cells with a homogeneous buried interface

Phosphonic-acid molecular interlayer enables superior hole extraction and directs growth of high-quality Sn perovskite films, achieving 17.89% PCE and strong stability.
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

A tiny rhino foetus developed by IVF: Jon A Juarez's best photograph

For the past 15 years, the BioRescue Project an international consortium dedicated to saving the species has been collecting and preserving sperm from deceased males. Using this genetic material and egg cells from Fatu, they've created 38 embryos. It may sound like a lot, but it's not. Since Najin and Fatu cannot carry a pregnancy, surrogate mothers are essential and it was decided to use southern white rhinos, a less endangered subspecies.
Science
fromCornell Chronicle
5 days ago

Nobel laureate shares research exploring the origins of life | Cornell Chronicle

Szostak began his talk by posing a question to the audience: Is life common in the universe, or is Earth a rare exception? While the discovery of exoplanets leads many to believe life could be widespread, Szostak said that the complexity of cell formation makes that seem less probable. Central to Szostak's talk was the "RNA World" hypothesis - the idea that early life initially revolved around RNA molecules before the advent of complex cellular structures.
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fromwww.nature.com
4 days ago

Men's Brains Shrink Faster than Women's. What That Means for Alzheimer's

Men experience greater age-related brain volume reductions across more regions than women, suggesting these changes do not account for women's higher Alzheimer's diagnosis rates.
Science
fromwww.bbc.com
4 days ago

Pictured: Winning entries for Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2025

Wim van den Heever captured a rare brown hyena in Kolmanskop, Namibia after ten years, winning Wildlife Photographer of the Year; exhibition opens 17 October.
Science
fromwww.independent.co.uk
4 days ago

New wearable UV detector can monitor exposure and prevent sunburn

A new fully transparent wearable UV sensor connects to smartphones to track UVA exposure, helping prevent sunburn and reduce skin cancer risk.
fromNature
5 days ago

The astrocytic ensemble acts as a multiday trace to stabilize memory - Nature

Recall transiently destabilizes memories, which require re-stabilization to become long-lasting. Despite its importance in human cognition and neuropsychiatric disorders6,7, the mechanisms that specifically stabilize memories of critical experiences-those that are essential for survival and frequently marked by emotional salience and repetition-remain incompletely understood. Memory traces are linked to specialized neuronal ensembles (neuronal engrams), which include neuronal populations that become Fos+ during both initial and repeated experiences8.
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fromNature
5 days ago

Mysterious 'little red dots' are baffling astronmers. What are they?

Little red dots are likely hybrid objects: active black holes enveloped in hot, dense gas cocoons that glow, distinct from classic black holes.
fromNature
5 days ago

In-plane dielectric constant and conductivity of confined water - Nature

In the bulk and at room temperature (RT), water exhibits exceptionally high dielectric constant ( εbulk ≈ 80) and high (for a wide-bandgap insulator) electrical conductivity ( σbulk ≈ 10 −5 S m −1)1. Both characteristics are inherently connected with the ability of water molecules to form hydrogen bonds11,12,13 and are key to the main properties of water. Among them is its remarkable ability to dissolve more substances than any other liquid7,8, which originates from the high εbulk of water that efficiently suppresses Coulomb interactions between solutes.
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fromwww.nature.com
5 days ago

Deaminative cross-coupling of amines by boryl radical -scission

Native primary, secondary, and tertiary amines can be activated via borane coordination to generate boryl radicals for copper-catalyzed deaminative cross-coupling.
from6abc Philadelphia
4 days ago

Study claims to solve mystery behind infamous 'Chicago Rat Hole'

CHICAGO -- The mystery of that infamous "Chicago Rat Hole" on the sidewalk may be solved! There was actually research done about it just published in Biology Letters. Scientists believe that outline is not of a rat - but more likely a squirrel. Using the measurements of the imprint, they say the impression resembles a squirrel: stocky and semi-aquatic, with webbed feet.
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fromLos Angeles Times
4 days ago

Super-intense earthquakes more prevalent, some scientists say. Does it heighten San Andreas risk?

Supershear earthquakes, where rupture outruns shear waves, occur more often and can generate shock-wave shaking, increasing seismic risk and requiring updated forecasts and building codes.
fromenglish.elpais.com
4 days ago

Fossils found in Kenya shed light on the origin of human hands

For a long time, Paranthropus boisei, a hominid that inhabited the Earth from 2.6 million years ago to 1.3 million years ago, had been considered by experts to be a relative of humans. Its robust jaw, large molars, and powerful chewing muscles evidenced a diet as primitive as it was difficult to process, consisting of tough grasses and reeds that other species perhaps couldn't consume.
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fromNature
5 days ago

The quest to make babies with lab-grown eggs and sperm

Lab-grown eggs and sperm could transform reproduction, enabling fertility solutions and same-sex genetic parenthood, but clinical application remains years away and uncertain.
Science
fromBig Think
4 days ago

Why NASA should go all-in on nuclear propulsion

Successful 1960s nuclear rocket development (Rover/NERVA) was effectively halted by shifting political priorities and budget cuts after the United States won the lunar race.
fromFuturism
4 days ago

Scientists Intrigued by Black Hole That Fell Into Star, Then Ate It From the Inside

But this new one, dubbed GRB 250702B, blows everything we know about these fearsome blasts out the water. For starters, it lasted a staggering seven hours, which is vastly longer than they typically do. And it also appeared to repeat several times over its run, which shouldn't be possible. A GRB is produced by the total obliteration of a star, so how could the same source emit multiple blasts?
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fromNature
5 days ago

Photocatalytic oxygen-atom transmutation of oxetanes - Nature

The replacement of oxygen atoms in readily available oxetanes would offer a direct route to a variety of these cyclic pharmacophores, yet such atom swapping has been rarely reported for non-aromatic molecules. Here we report a general photocatalytic strategy that selectively substitutes the oxygen atom of an oxetane with a nitrogen-, sulfur- or carbon-based moiety, transforming it into a diverse range of saturated cyclic building blocks in a single operation.
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fromNature
5 days ago

Isolation, engineering and ecology of temperate phages from the human gut - Nature

Inducible prophages are widespread across diverse human gut bacterial isolates and respond to multiple environmental induction agents.
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

Andrew Coates obituary

My father, Andrew Coates, who has died aged 86, had a professional life in three acts: as a technical illustrator in the aviation sector, as a technical adviser to lighthouse keepers and as a teacher. Andrew had been born completely deaf, and so each of those work paths had their challenges. But perhaps his greatest achievements were outside the workplace.
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fromArs Technica
4 days ago

Once unthinkable, NASA and Lockheed now consider launching Orion on other rockets

Lockheed Martin is shifting Orion toward reusability and commercial service-model missions, offering to sell flights as a service and fly Orion on different rockets.
fromBig Think
4 days ago

Addictions and habits, explained by a neuroscientist, a psychologist, and a journalist

Why are bad habits so hard to break? Neuroscientist Carl Hart, PhD, journalist Charles Duhigg, and psychologist Adam Alter, PhD explain how your brain wires habits as cue-routine-reward loops that control nearly half of your daily life. They show why willpower alone rarely works, why technology fuels new forms of addiction, and why habits can only be replaced, not erased.
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fromApartment Therapy
4 days ago

I Asked an Arachnologist How to Get Rid of Spider Webs for Good - What He Told Me Changed Everything

Different spiders build distinct webs; evaluate webs before removal to avoid harming spiders and understand web types like cobwebs, funnel, and sheet webs.
Science
fromTheregister
4 days ago

CISA exec blames hackers, Democrats for network risk

Exploitable vulnerabilities in F5 BIG-IP devices create imminent risk of lateral access and full compromise of US federal networks; urgent patches and inventories are required.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
5 days ago

Contributors to Scientific American's November 2025 Issue

Many dietary supplement claims about reducing inflammation are driven by social-media trends and require critical evaluation and evidence before accepting effectiveness.
Science
fromwww.nature.com
5 days ago

Visualizations Trace How Immigration Underpins Dozens of Recent Nobel Science Prizes

A substantial portion of Nobel laureates in physics, chemistry and medicine were born outside the country where they received their prize.
#jpl-layoffs
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fromNature
6 days ago

Longer grant cycles would boost research in Africa

Two- to three-year research funding cycles in Africa create high administrative burdens, impede resilience to shocks, and are inadequate for long-term, infrastructure-heavy projects.
Science
fromFast Company
5 days ago

The 5 next big things in space and telecom for 2025

Space and telecom are converging as satellite roaming and space-enabled services grow, while specialized companies advance biotech research, orbital transport, and AI-driven low-cost wireless reselling.
Science
fromwww.nature.com
5 days ago

These Economists Just Won an Economics Nobel for Showing How Science Fuels Growth

Technological and scientific innovation, combined with market competition, drive long-term economic growth; useful scientific knowledge and market-driven innovation explain modern growth.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
5 days ago

November 2025: Science History from 50, 100 and 150 Years Ago

Gas-turbine and Stirling-cycle engines can significantly improve automobile fuel economy—about 22% and 35% respectively—compared to improved Otto-cycle engines.
Science
fromInsideHook
6 days ago

7 Strategies for Increasing Your "Neuroplasticity"

Intensive navigation training enlarges hippocampus grey matter, demonstrating lifelong neuroplasticity that improves memory, learning, adaptation, and resilience against cognitive decline.
Science
fromNature
6 days ago

Do rats double-dip food with their tails?

Rodents obtain refreshment through cunning behaviors, and a book celebrating all aspects of honey is featured alongside archival material.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
5 days ago

Math Puzzle: Find the Time

Hands A and C are pointing exactly at hour marks. If one of these two hands is the hour hand, the minute and second hands should both be on top of each other and point at 12. Because this is not the case, B must be the hour hand. Because the minute hand points to a full minute, the second hand must point to 12.
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