Science

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fromFuturism
17 hours ago

Chinese Fusion Reactor Achieves Plasma Density Previously Thought to Be Impossible

EAST achieved plasma densities exceeding the Greenwald limit by pre-filling the reactor with high gas pressure and controlling plasma-wall interactions for stable high-density fusion.
Science
fromTechCrunch
16 hours ago

Commonwealth Fusion Systems installs reactor magnet, lands deal with Nvidia | TechCrunch

CFS installed the first of 18 powerful superconducting magnets for its Sparc fusion reactor, aiming to turn the demonstration device on next year.
fromNature
2 days ago

Daily briefing: The human cells in our bodies that aren't genetically ours

A virus that sickens marine mammals has been detected in Arctic waters for the first time. Scientists used drones armed with petri dishes to collect samples of blow - the air and mucus whales expel from their blowholes - from whales in northern Norway. The team identified cetacean morbillivirus in samples from humpback whales ( Megaptera novaeangliae) and one sperm whale ( Physeter macrocephalus), though the humpbacks showed no symptoms of disease.
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fromArs Technica
20 hours ago

Private equity deal shows just how far America's legacy rocket industry has fallen

The RS-25 engine, by far the largest in L3Harris' portfolio and a former Rocketdyne product, is not part of the sale. The RS-25 was initially known as the Space Shuttle Main Engine and was designed for reusability. The expendable heavy-lift SLS rocket uses four of the engines, and NASA is burning through the 16 leftover shuttle-era RS-25 engines on the first four SLS flights for the agency's Artemis Moon program.
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fromHarvard Gazette
13 hours ago

Want to speed brain research? It's all in how you look at it. - Harvard Gazette

SmartEM uses machine learning to guide common single-beam scanning electron microscopes in real time, increasing scanning speed sevenfold and democratizing high-resolution connectomics.
Science
fromFast Company
21 hours ago

Quantum computing momentum grows: D-Wave announces first major breakthrough of 2026

D-Wave demonstrated scalable, on-chip cryogenic control for gate-model qubits, reducing control-line complexity and enabling more practical, scalable gate-model quantum computers.
fromianVisits
1 day ago

Tube trains could navigate the Underground using the weird rules of Quantum Physics

Tube trains of the future may soon know exactly where they are underground - even in places where GPS is blind - by tapping into the strange rules of the quantum world. Most modern tracking systems rely on satellites to pinpoint location, backed up by accelerometers that measure tiny movements between GPS updates. It works well enough above ground, but those accelerometers gradually drift, which is why they constantly need satellite corrections.
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fromInsideHook
22 hours ago

Could Space Junk Put Air Travel at Risk?

Expanding low Earth orbit satellite constellations increase inflight connectivity but raise the risk of falling space debris that could endanger aircraft.
Science
fromFuturism
14 hours ago

Scientists Discover Impossible Object in Deep Space

A galaxy cluster 1.4 billion years after the Big Bang exhibits gas temperatures at least five times higher than cosmological models predict.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
12 hours ago

Scientists Just Moved the South Pole. Here's Why

When we envision the South Pole, we tend to think of a fixed point on Earth. But it is more fluid than you might suppose. For starters, the geographic South Pole is situated at the southern tip of Earth's axis, pretty much right in the middle of Antarctica. But this place on our planet does not coincide with Earth's magnetic or geomagnetic South Polesthose are related to the planet's magnetic field and are located on the Adelie Coast and near Russia's Vostok Station, respectively.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
12 hours ago

Astronomers May Have Unlocked the Reason for Betelgeuse's Bizarre Dimming

Astronomers may have finally solved one of the weirdest mysteries of our night sky: why Betelgeuse, a massive star in the constellation Orion, seems to fade and brighten as if it were operated by a heavenly dimmer switch. Using the Hubble Space Telescope and ground-based observatories, scientists observed Betelgeuse for almost eight years and found that patterns in the star's light suggested the wake of another, unseen star was passing through its atmosphere.
Science
fromNature
1 day ago

Jellyfish sleep like humans - even though they don't have brains

Neither jellyfish nor sea anemones have brains. But these animals sleep in ways strikingly similar to humans, according to a study published today in Nature Communications. The findings bolster a theory that sleep evolved, at least in part, to protect the DNA in individual nerve cells, helping to repair damage that builds up while animals are awake.
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fromNature
1 day ago

The poetic life and death of a glow-worm

A peek behind the scenes at the zoo reveals animal escapades, and a glow-worm shines in a mild midwinter, in our weekly dip into Nature 's archive.
Science
fromBig Think
1 day ago

Astronomers are on "Cloud 9" with a new, starless gas cloud

Out there, in the vast Universe, are clumps of matter that come in many different sizes and masses. We might be most familiar with galaxies like our Milky Way: with hundreds of billions of solar masses worth of stars, even more gas and plasma, and more than a trillion solar masses worth of dark matter. At smaller masses, however, it takes longer, and becomes more and more difficult, for clouds of normal matter to collapse.
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fromHigh Country News
1 day ago

An age-old monument faces modern threats - High Country News

Grand Staircase-Escalante preserves an exceptionally complete 30–300 million-year terrestrial geologic and fossil record but faces threats from current land-management policies.
Science
fromCN Traveller
16 hours ago

The ultimate guide to travelling for the 2026 total solar eclipse

A total solar eclipse on August 12, 2026, crosses East Greenland, Iceland, and Spain, requiring travel within the path of totality for full darkness.
fromwww.wired.com
20 hours ago

Winter Is a Great Time for Bird WatchingHere's How to Attract Them to Your Yard

While migratory birds do fly south for the winter, many seed- and insect-eating birds do not, and with leaves off the trees, the winter months are often the best time to watch them. As someone who tests smart bird feeders year-round for WIRED, I'm always interested in ways to ensure I'm attracting the largest and most interesting variety of birds to my yard, no matter the season.
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fromNature
6 days ago

Science in 2026: what to expect this year

2026 will feature small reasoning AI models challenging LLMs, gene‑editing clinical trials for rare disorders, a Phobos sample mission, and US policy shifts affecting science.
#spacex
fromBusiness Insider
4 days ago
Science

SpaceX moves thousands of Starlink satellites in orbit after near miss with Chinese rival

SpaceX will lower about 4,400 Starlink satellites in 2026 to reduce collision risk, speed atmospheric decay of defunct satellites, and increase service density.
fromComputerworld
4 days ago
Science

Space X plans to lower Starlink satellites' orbital altitude

SpaceX will lower Starlink satellite orbits from about 550 km to 480 km in 2026 to increase space safety.
Science
from24/7 Wall St.
1 day ago

Why Rocket Lab's Sky-High Valuation Is a Big Risk in 2026

Rocket Lab's growth and stock performance depend on timely, successful Neutron launches to capture larger payload markets and materially increase revenue.
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Nine scientific breakthroughs I'd like to see in 2026 from earworms to procrastination | Emma Beddington

Science provides buoyant optimism amid personal depletion and global crises, with 2025 discoveries showcasing astonishing advances and practical hope for major problems.
fromNature
2 days ago

Sunyaev-Zeldovich detection of hot intracluster gas at redshift 4.3 - Nature

Most baryons in present-day galaxy clusters exist as hot gas (≳10 7 K), forming the intracluster medium (ICM)1. Cosmological simulations predict that the mass and temperature of the ICM decline towards earlier times, as intracluster gas in younger clusters is still assembling and being heated2,3,4. To date, hot ICM has been securely detected only in a few systems at or above z ≈ 2, leaving the timing and mechanism of ICM assembly uncertain5,6,7.
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fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

How Psychedelics Can Catalyze Creative Breakthroughs

Psychedelics can temporarily loosen entrenched cognitive habits, enabling unusual associations and increasing the likelihood of novel insights.
Science
frominsideevs.com
2 days ago

The First Production All-Solid-State Battery Is Here, And It Promises 5-Minute Charging

Donut Lab developed a production-ready all-solid-state battery with 400 Wh/kg energy density, five-minute charging, 100,000-cycle lifespan, high safety, and extreme temperature resilience.
Science
fromArs Technica
1 day ago

NASA's science budget won't be a train wreck after all

Budget cuts suspend Mars Sample Return, fund Mars-focused technologies, preserve some planetary missions, and force NASA to craft a new strategy under new leadership.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Stunningly Hot Galaxy Cluster Puts New Spin on How These Cosmic Behemoths Evolved

Galaxy cluster SPT2349-56 contained gas at least five times hotter than predicted when the universe was 1.4 billion years old.
Science
fromHigh Country News
2 days ago

Drifters and the introduction of plate tectonics - High Country News

Plate tectonics replaced fixed-continent views by linking seafloor spreading and magnetic evidence to a revolutionary understanding of continental and oceanic processes.
Science
fromCN Traveller
1 day ago

7 astronomical events worth travelling for in 2026

Major 2026 astronomy tourism opportunities include a total solar eclipse, Artemis II lunar flyby launch, an annular eclipse in Antarctica, and other celestial events.
Science
fromInverse
1 day ago

What Sci-Fi Gets So Wrong About Suspended Animation - And Why The Truth Is So Much Wilder

Science-fiction commonly misrepresents suspended animation, while real hibernation and deep-sleep research reveals diverse physiological possibilities and advancing practical prospects.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Why Does Life Keep Evolving These Geometric Patterns?

The mirror spider can rapidly shift a patchwork of minuscule reflective plates underneath its abdomen's outer surface, altering the pattern of mirrorlike flashes. This uncommon display comes from common building blocks: Similar tilelike arrangements of plates and soft joints appear throughout the tree of life, from turtle shells to tropical fruit peels. Researchers have now compiled 100 examples of this pattern across animals, plants, microbes and viruses, which they describe in PNAS Nexus.
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fromEngadget
2 days ago

L'Oreal's CES 2026 beauty devices include a skin-like flexible LED mask

L'Oréal introduced three beauty-tech devices at CES 2026: an infrared Light Straight styler, an ultra-thin LED Face Mask, and a flexible LED Eye Mask prototype.
Science
fromWIRED
1 day ago

Flu Is Relentless. Crispr Might Be Able to Shut It Down

Researchers aim to use CRISPR-Cas13 delivered by lipid nanoparticles as a nasal spray or injection to target and inactivate influenza RNA strains.
Science
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

How Social Encounters Prime the Brain to Remember

Brief social encounters with unfamiliar individuals transiently shift brain state to strengthen consolidation and linking of subsequent emotional or meaningful memories.
Science
fromsfist.com
2 days ago

Juvenile Deep-Sea Ribbonfish Makes Rare Appearance in Shallow Waters of Monterey Bay

A juvenile ribbonfish appeared nearshore in Monterey Bay at about 15 feet depth, photographed by diver Ted Judah and later identified by marine biologists.
Science
fromInverse
1 day ago

The Just Plain Odd Ways Birds Sleep - And What It Means for Sleep Science

Many animals use specialized sleep strategies—such as unihemispheric sleep, sleeping while swimming, or partial brain sleep during flight—to balance rest with environmental demands.
Science
fromArs Technica
1 day ago

Earliest African cremation was 9,500 years ago

A 9,500-year-old intact hunter-gatherer cremation pyre containing an adult woman's remains was found at Mount Hora, Malawi, indicating organized communal ritual and labor.
Science
fromNature
2 days ago

I see Mozambique's baboons as windows into hominid evolution

Gorongosa National Park's palaeontology and primatology research links fossils, living primates, and fieldwork to reveal past coastal forests and species refugia informing human-evolution studies.
Science
from247wallst.com
1 day ago

The US Just Added Silver to Critical Minerals List And These Investments Will Benefit

Silver became a US critical mineral as industrial and technological demand outstrips production, driving physical-driven price surges and heightened central bank and ETF buying.
#random-heteropolymers
fromNature
1 week ago
Science

Random heteropolymers as enzyme mimics - Nature

Random heteropolymers with programmed segmental sidechain projections form pseudo-active sites that mimic enzymes and catalyze selective reactions such as citronellal oxidation and cyclization.
fromNature
1 week ago
Science

Random heteropolymers as enzyme mimics - Nature

Random heteropolymers with programmed segmental sidechain projections create pseudo-active sites that catalyse selective reactions and retain activity under non-biological conditions.
Science
fromwww.independent.co.uk
3 days ago

Inside the quest for the origin of Stonehenge's Altar Stone

Professor Richard Bevins traced Stonehenge's Pembrokeshire bluestones to Craig Rhos-y-Felin, providing the first definitive quarry match and reviving transport debates.
Science
fromNature
1 week ago

Highly efficient LED device built by stacking layers of light-emitting perovskite

Tandem perovskite LEDs that recycle photons between stacked layers can exceed the combined emissions and efficiency of two single-unit devices.
Science
fromwww.nature.com
3 days ago

Author Correction: Rewiring an olfactory circuit by altering cell-surface combinatorial code

The bottom three panels in the klg RNAi column of Fig. 1h were duplicates of images from Fig. 1c and have been replaced with correct figures.
Science
fromNature
3 days ago

Author Correction: Repulsions instruct synaptic partner matching in an olfactory circuit - Nature

Zhuoran Li and Cheng Lyu contributed equally; Liqun Luo is corresponding contact. Affiliations: Stanford Biology/HHMI and University of Chicago Biochemistry/Neuroscience.
Science
fromWIRED
2 days ago

A New Bridge Links the Strange Math of Infinity to Computer Science

Problems in descriptive set theory can be reformulated as equivalent problems about communication in distributed computer networks, linking infinite-set logic with finite algorithms.
Science
fromNature
1 week ago

A chiral fermionic valve driven by quantum geometry - Nature

Quantum geometry in PdGa devices spatially separates chiral fermions into Chern-number–polarized states, enabling tunable current-induced magnetization and coherent interferometry without magnetic fields.
#natural-history
Science
fromenglish.elpais.com
2 days ago

A natural evolution of cruelty

Evolutionary success arises from both competition and cooperation; symbiosis and exploitation can determine survival and drive major evolutionary changes.
Science
fromFuturism
3 days ago

The Large Hadron Collider Is Being Shut Down

The LHC will shut down for about five years starting in June for a high-luminosity upgrade to increase collision rates by roughly tenfold.
Science
fromThe Atlantic
3 days ago

Stop Talking About the Moon

The moon receives excessive, repetitive media attention that sensationalizes routine lunar events like supermoons, often exaggerating significance and linking them to astrology.
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

The Foundations of Achievement

Throughout human history, individuals and societies have advanced when they upheld rigorous standards that develop and advance merit, competence, effort, skill, and capability. The construction of monuments, architectural knowledge, the development of engineering systems, and the advances in scientific knowledge all required precise alignment with universal laws of mathematics, geometry, and physics (Haklay & Gopher, 2020; Trigger, 1990). For example, in the case of the Egyptian pyramids,
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Science
fromFuturism
3 days ago

Scientists Announce Results After Scanning 3I/ATLAS for Alien Signals

Radio observations of interstellar object 3I/ATLAS found no artificial radio emissions, supporting its natural comet-like behavior.
#lick-observatory
fromSFGATE
6 days ago
Science

Storms threaten historic Bay Area telescope after winds batter observatory

fromSFGATE
6 days ago
Science

Storms threaten historic Bay Area telescope after winds batter observatory

Science
fromwww.bbc.com
4 days ago

AI teachers and cybernetics - what could the world look like in 2050?

By 2050, advances in nanotechnology, AI and robotics will blur machine-biology boundaries, enabling health-monitoring implants and targeted nanomachine drug delivery.
#starlink
fromEngadget
5 days ago
Science

Starlink is lowering thousands of satellites' orbits to reduce risk of collisions

fromEngadget
5 days ago
Science

Starlink is lowering thousands of satellites' orbits to reduce risk of collisions

Science
fromIndependent
5 days ago

Should you book your holiday destination according to your star sign? This woman says you should try it

Astrocartography and natal charts help people choose travel destinations by matching individuals to earthly 'hotspots' where they feel most aligned.
Science
fromwww.npr.org
4 days ago

Brain organoids are helping researchers, but their use also creates unease

Brain organoids model human neural development, raising ethical questions about consciousness, pain perception, and animal chimeras that call for careful oversight.
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

Donald Trump wants the US back on the moon before his term ends. Can it happen?

2026 will be pivotal as Artemis missions, Jared Isaacman's NASA leadership, and political directives accelerate a US push to beat China to the Moon.
Science
fromenglish.elpais.com
4 days ago

Alain Aspect, Nobel laureate in physics: Einstein was so smart that he would have had to recognize quantum entanglement'

Alain Aspect experimentally demonstrated quantum entanglement, settled debates between Einstein and Bohr, catalyzed the second quantum revolution, and won the 2022 Nobel Prize.
fromNews Center
4 days ago

Shape-Shifting Cell Channel Reveals New Target for Precision Drugs - News Center

In a new study published in Nature Communications, Northwestern University scientists uncovered the molecular trick behind PANX1's versatility. The channel dilates and constricts - just like the iris of an eye - to control the flow of chemical messages, which influence everything from brain activity to inflammation and even fertility. The findings show that PANX1 isn't a rigid channel but a shape-shifting molecular valve that can dynamically resize to accommodate both tiny particles and bulky signaling molecules.
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fromArs Technica
4 days ago

After half a decade, the Russian space station segment stopped leaking

PrK module atmospheric leaks caused by microscopic cracks have stopped venting after inspections and sealing, with pressure holding steady while NASA and Roscosmos continue monitoring.
fromwww.bbc.com
5 days ago

The great debate about whether the NHS should use magic mushrooms to treat mental health

When I experienced it, I burst out crying,
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fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

How the Brain Weighs Food in the Blink of an Eye

The brain encodes multiple food attributes around 200 ms after viewing, operating in parallel, with appetizingness and level of processing explaining most judgments.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
4 days ago

How Woodpeckers Turn Their Entire Bodies into Pecking Machines

Woodpeckers tense their entire bodies and exhale with each explosive strike, coordinating all muscles to peck and withstand forces over thirty times their body weight.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
4 days ago

Astronomers Have Discovered the Pleiades' Secret Stellar Family

The solar system formed in a large open cluster that later dispersed, while some tightly bound cluster cores can survive and reveal stellar formation histories.
fromBig Think
5 days ago

Ask Ethan: Why is there no such thing as antigravity?

Although there are four known fundamental forces to the Universe, there's only one that matters on the largest cosmic scales of all: gravitation. The other three fundamental forces: the strong nuclear force, which holds protons and neutrons together, the weak nuclear force, responsible for radioactive decays and any "species change" among quarks and leptons, and the electromagnetic force, which causes neutral atoms to form, are all largely irrelevant on cosmic scales. The reason why is simple: the other forces, when you gather large sets of particles together, all balance out at large distances. Matter, under those three forces, appears "neutral" at large scales, and no net force exists.
Science
fromFast Company
4 days ago

January 2026 full 'wolf moon': Look up tonight to see the dazzling first supermoon of the year

The January full " wolf moon" is forecast to appear overnight into tomorrow morning Saturday, January 3, peaking at 5:03 a.m. ET when it will be at its fullest, according to EarthSky. However, don't be fooled: It will appear full both nights, due to its close proximity to Earth (making it appear 14% larger), and proximity to Jupiter and Gemini's twin stars-all of which will make it appear even brighter.
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fromArs Technica
4 days ago

Researchers spot Saturn-sized planet in the "Einstein desert"

Free-floating planets are detectable mainly via microlensing, which measures Einstein ring size; statistical analysis reveals two planet-size clusters separated by an 'Einstein desert' gap.
Science
fromianVisits
4 days ago

Where to watch the 2026 total solar eclipse

Total solar eclipse on 12 August 2026 will obscure about 90% of the sun in the UK; totality is accessible across northern Spain by train.
#sahelanthropus-tchadensis
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fromForbes
5 days ago

Women Influencers In Energy And Climate To Follow On LinkedIn In 2026

LinkedIn showcases influential women whose substantive, analytical posts provide high-signal insights into energy and climate transitions across science, policy, business, and markets.
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fromNature
6 days ago

Science in 2026: what to expect this year

Small-scale AI models may outcompete large language models in reasoning; clinical gene-editing trials for rare disorders, a Phobos sample mission, and US policy changes will shape 2026 science.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
5 days ago

The Push to Make Semiconductors in Space Just Took a Serious Leap Forward

A U.K. startup achieved uncrewed plasma creation aboard a commercial satellite, demonstrating machine-only semiconductor crystal manufacturing in microgravity to reduce space manufacturing costs.
fromEngadget
5 days ago

Airloom will showcase its new approach to wind power at CES

Rather than the very tall towers typically used for this approach, Airloom's structures are 20 to 30 meters high. They are comprised of a loop of adjustable wings that move along a track, a design that's akin to a roller coaster. As the wings move, they generate power just like the blades on a regular wind turbine do. Airloom claims that its structures require 40 percent less mass than a traditional one while delivering the same output.
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fromArs Technica
5 days ago

Research roundup: 7 cool science stories we almost missed

A range of discoveries includes a double-detonating superkilonova, Roman liquid gypsum burials, kangaroo posture enhancing hopping efficiency, and a fossil bird that choked on rocks.
fromenglish.elpais.com
5 days ago

Nathalie Cabrol, astrobiologist: It's an achievement of science to admit we don't know what life is'

Nathalie Cabrol is no ordinary scientist. The astrobiologist holds two records for the highest-altitude scuba dives. She achieved them unintentionally while exploring the lake at Licancabur, a nearly 6,000-meter-high volcano on the border between Chile and Bolivia. Cabrol has spent decades studying Earth to understand the possibility of human life in the extreme conditions of our galaxy. Slight and gray-haired, the explorer wears a vest from the SETI Institute,
Science
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fromScienceDaily
5 days ago

Myth busted: Your body isn't canceling out your workout

Increased physical activity raises total daily energy expenditure; the body does not compensate by reducing energy allocated to other physiological functions.
fromPsychology Today
5 days ago

There Goes the Sun: Pondering the Universe's Past and Future

A key goal, writes the author, Bobby Azarian,is to argue against the view that life is an unlikely accident that may have emerged only once on one tiny speck in a vast universe, and that it is certain to disappear as the universe's free energy dissipates in accordance with the second law of thermodynamics. He argues that while such a conclusion had for several generations seemed to be the destination to which clear-headed scientific exploration had brought mankind,
Science
fromTheregister
5 days ago

Mitigating pollution from satellite RF transmissions

In an interview with The Register, Tudor Williams, CTO of high-frequency RF communication company Filtronic, explained the problem, which is mainly related to satellite-to-ground transmissions (many large constellations, such as SpaceX's Starlink, use optical links for satellite-to-satellite communication, which don't cause the same issues.) According to Williams, the problem comes from the side lobes of poorly designed antennas, where signals are unintentionally spread. The effect can be bands used for communications overlapping with observation bands, causing headaches for radio astronomers.
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fromBig Think
6 days ago

10 quantum myths that must die in the new year

Quantum mechanics introduces inherent probabilistic behavior and produces macroscopic phenomena like superconductivity and superfluidity, contradicting classical determinism.
Science
fromTravel + Leisure
6 days ago

January Has 5 Night Sky Wonders-Including a Supermoon, Fireball Meteors, and Jupiter at Its Brightest

January 2026 offers excellent winter stargazing with a wolf supermoon, a diminished Quadrantids meteor shower, bold Jupiter, and very clear northern skies.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
5 days ago

Scientists Just Clocked a Rogue' Planet the Size of Saturn

In a new study published in Science on Thursday, scientists show how they measured the mass of one such rogue planet for the first timea breakthrough that could enable further studies of these strange lonely worlds. Instead of looking at the planet's orbit, the research team, led by Subo Dong of Peking University, instead analyzed how the planet's gravity bent the light from a distant star, in a so-called microlensing event, from two separate vantage points: Earth and the now-retired Gaia space observatory.
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fromHigh Country News
6 days ago

An introduction to deep time in the West - High Country News

Earth's deep time renders human history almost instantaneous, with landscapes shaped over billions of years still affecting present-day Western North America.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
5 days ago

Watch the First Meteor Shower of 2026 Light Up the Sky This Weekend

The Quadrantid meteor shower peaks the night of January 3–4, producing bright fireballs best seen predawn from the Northern Hemisphere, though moonlight may hinder viewing.
Science
fromenglish.elpais.com
5 days ago

There is as much life left to discover on planet Earth as that which is already known

Discovery and description of new species is accelerating across most taxonomic groups, with as many undiscovered species remaining as are already known.
fromTravel + Leisure
5 days ago

The Surprising Science Behind Why Cold Air Feels So Good-and Where to Breathe the World's Cleanest Air

In late November, the Finnish destination revealed its survey, which found that 73 percent of respondents said they love the feeling of "breathing in crisp winter air," and 74 percent said that " time spent outdoors in winter boosts their mental wellbeing." It also noted that two-thirds (63 percent) said that "winter air smells fresher and cleaner than any other season." And, as Santa's Lapland found, there's actual science to back up that belief.
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

The man taking over the Large Hadron Collider only to switch it off

On 1 January, Thomson takes over as the director general of Cern, the multi-Nobel prizewinning nuclear physics laboratory on the outskirts of Geneva. It is here, deep beneath the ground, that the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), the largest scientific instrument ever built, recreates conditions that existed microseconds after the big bang. The machine won its place in history for discovering the mysterious Higgs boson, whose accompanying field turns space into a kind of cosmic glue.
Science
fromPsychology Today
6 days ago

Breakthrough Brain-Computer Interface Is Minimally Invasive

An important milestone has been achieved in brain-computer interface (BCI) technology. A new peer-reviewed study published in Nature Biomedical Engineering shows how a high-performance brain-computer interface can be rapidly implanted through a minimally invasive procedure. "We have demonstrated that the entire surgical procedure for cranial micro-slit insertion, from initial skin incision to endoscope-guided array placement and final securing of the array positions, can be safely performed in under 20 minutes," wrote corresponding author Benjamin Rapoport, MD, PhD, along with his team of neuroscientists at Precision Neuroscience.
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fromFuturism
6 days ago

Man in Intensive Care Unit After Slamming Liquid Nitrogen Cocktail That Ruptured His Stomach

Drinking un-evaporated liquid nitrogen can cause rapid internal gas expansion, rupturing organs and causing life-threatening injuries.
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