Science

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fromFuturism
4 hours ago

Elon Says His New Rocket Is as Important as the Origin of Life Itself

The, the degree to which Starshipis a revolutionary technology is not well understood in the world. "It's the first time that there's been any rocket design, where full rapid reusability is possible - well, full reusability at all is possible, or full reusability at all is possible," Musk's word salad continued. "This is the first design where a reusable rocket is one of the possible - with success - is one of the possible outcomes."
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fromFuturism
16 hours ago

NASA Says It's Just Gonna Stare Into Cosmic Voids for a While

Cosmic voids, vast regions nearly empty of galaxies, could reveal properties of dark matter and dark energy via surveys by Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope.
fromFuturism
13 hours ago

This New Statistic on Kessler Syndrome Will Give Anyone Who Cares About Space Travel an Instantaneous Stress Headache

In 1978, NASA researcher Donald Kessler and his colleagues published a paper titled "Collision frequency of artificial satellites: The creation of a debris belt." The paper laid down a grim warning: a single collision between satellites that would escalate into a series of followup accidents, "each of which would increase the probability of further collisions, leading to the growth of a belt of debris around the Earth." "Under certain conditions, the belt could begin to form within this century and could be a significant problem during the next century," the prescient paper warned.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
21 hours ago

Which story popularised the eating of turkey at Christmas? The Saturday quiz

Locations, historical facts, scientific facts, and cultural links connect Christmas traditions, notable individuals, and entertainment references.
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fromFuturism
18 hours ago

James Webb Spots First Ever Supermassive Black Hole to Be Yeeted Out of Its Home Galaxy

A 10-million-solar-mass supermassive black hole appears to be escaping its host galaxy at ~2.2 million mph, producing a galaxy-sized bow shock and 200,000-light-year tail.
#space-tourism
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fromTravel + Leisure
15 hours ago

This Trio of Islands Has the World's Darkest Skies-and Perfect Conditions for Stargazing

Remote, low-radiance islands offer the best stargazing, with several islands achieving perfect radiance scores and recognized dark-sky status.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
13 hours ago

Catch the Last Meteor Shower of 2025Right in Time for the Winter Solstice

The Ursid meteor shower will peak December 21–22, visible across the Northern Hemisphere near Ursa Minor, though typically producing only 5–10 meteors per hour.
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 day ago

The guardians of the meteorites of the Argentine Chaco

The culprits are meteorites, or as the Indigenous Moqoit (Mocovi) people call them, gifts from the sky. The Piguem N'onaxa (Campo del Cielo, or Field of the Sky) Reserve is a provincial park in the town of Gancedo, Chaco. It is a protected area within a larger zone where, more than 4,000 years ago, a giant meteor, believed to have weighed about 800 tons roughly the weight of five blue whales fell.
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fromThe Atlantic
12 hours ago

Day 20 of the 2025 Space Telescope Advent Calendar: The Cosmic Cliffs

Day 20 of the 2025 Space Telescope Advent Calendar: The Cosmic Cliffs. The James Webb Space Telescope peered inside a region at the edge of a gigantic gaseous cavity within the star cluster NGC 3324. The cluster, about 9,100 light-years away, near the Carina Nebula, is believed to be fairly young, only about 12 million years old.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
9 hours ago

Snails on a plane: Australia flies rescue mission to Norfolk Island for a tiny, critically endangered species

On a grey day in early June, a commercial plane landed at Norfolk Island Airport in the South Pacific. Onboard was precious cargo ferried some 1,700km from Sydney: four blue plastic crates with LIVE ANIMALS signs affixed to the outside. Inside were thumbnail-sized snails, hundreds of them, with delicate, keeled shells. The molluscs' arrival was the culmination of an ambitious plan five years in the making: to bring a critically endangered species back from the brink.
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fromNature
2 days ago

Are we living in a parallel universe? The strange physics of Stranger Things

The many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics inspired Stranger Things' Upside Down concept, linking fictional parallel universes to a real scientific theory.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

If I Stop the World, Will I Melt with You?

I'll stop the world and melt with youYou've seen the differenceAnd it's getting better all the timeThere's nothing you and I won't do I'll stop the world and melt with you So is it right? If we stop the planet (let's assume this means halting Earth's spin), will it melt? Amazingly, we can figure this out. The key here is the amount of energy it would take to literally stop the world.
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fromNature
2 days ago

Nature's News & Views roundup of 2025

In this episode: 1:58 Evidence of ancient brine on an asteroid Samples taken from the asteroid Bennu by NASA's OSIRIS-REx spacecraft suggest the parent body it originated from is likely to have contained salty, subsurface water. This finding provides insights into the chemistry of the early Solar System, and suggests that brines might have been an important place where pre-biotic molecules were formed.
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fromArs Technica
1 day ago

Two space startups prove you don't need to break the bank to rendezvous in space

In-space transportation is evolving through autonomous orbital transfer vehicles enabling on-orbit servicing and autonomous rendezvous, demonstrated by Starfish's camera-based control of the Mira spacecraft.
fromArs Technica
1 day ago

Rocket Report: Russia pledges quick fix for Soyuz launch pad; Ariane 6 aims high

Several new rockets made their first flights this year. Blue Origin's New Glenn was the most notable debut, with a successful inaugural launch in January followed by an impressive second flight in November, culminating in the booster's first landing on an offshore platform. Second on the list is China's Zhuque-3, a partially reusable methane-fueled rocket developed by the quasi-commercial launch company LandSpace. The medium-lift Zhuque-3 successfully reached orbit on its first flight earlier this month, and its booster narrowly missed landing downrange.
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fromTechCrunch
1 day ago

Rocket Lab wins another defense-related space contract | TechCrunch

The company said Friday that its subsidiary, Rocket Lab USA, was awarded a prime contract by the Space Development Agency (SDA) to design and manufacture 18 satellites. The satellites will be quipped with advanced missile warning, tracking, and defense sensors for the agency's Tracking Layer Tranche 3 program. This contract is separate from an existing $515 million award to deliver satellites for SDA's Transport Layer-Beta Tranche 2 program.
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fromEngadget
1 day ago

A Starlink satellite just exploded and left 'trackable' debris

A Starlink satellite suffered a likely internal explosion that vented its propulsion tank, released small debris, is tumbling and will reenter, posing no risk to the ISS.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

10 Fascinating Math Findings of 2025

Major 2025 mathematical advances include a noperthedron, probabilistic patterns governing primes, proof of the geometric Langlands conjecture, and progress in knot complexity and chaos theory.
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fromArs Technica
1 day ago

Russia is about to do the most Russia thing ever with its next space station

Russia will continue operating the aging ISS core, inheriting microbial contamination risks, heavy maintenance burdens, and limited research capacity without modern orbital replacements.
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fromArs Technica
2 days ago

These are the flying discs the government wants you to know about

DiskSats are flat, lightweight, carbon-fiber disc satellites designed for efficient rideshare launches and demonstrated successful deployment and initial contact after a Rocket Lab Electron launch.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Get Lost in This Dazzling New Map of the Cosmos

SPHEREx completed its first full-sky infrared map in 102 colors, enabling three-dimensional mapping of cosmic distances through spectral redshift measurements.
fromComputerWeekly.com
1 day ago

BT: UK's next phase of quantum progress hinges on network build | Computer Weekly

After decades of research and experimentation, quantum is shifting from discovery to deployment, and the coming year will be critical for stepping up delivery on a world‑class quantum network by 2035, according to a research note by BT. Furthermore, said Gabriela Styf Sjoman, the firm's managing director of research and network strategy, the UK's next phase of quantum progress hinges on building quantum-ready and quantum-secure networks.
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#space-debris
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fromNature
2 days ago

Oddly cool super-hot planet has an atmosphere it shouldn't

An ultra-hot, close-orbit exoplanet retains a dense atmosphere despite intense stellar irradiation and expected rapid atmospheric escape.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Offshore Wind Farm in China Becomes a Haven for Oysters, Barnacles, and More, Study Finds

Offshore wind farms may do more than boost renewable energy: they might support marine ecosystems, too. That's the takeaway of a new study conducted in China. The researchers found that wind turbines provided support for colonies of oysters and barnacles and that fish species and biomass were more abundant near the turbines than they were in an area without the machines.
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fromWIRED
1 day ago

Americans Are Increasingly Convinced That Aliens Have Visited Earth

Nearly half of Americans now say aliens have definitely or probably visited Earth, with uncertainty declining significantly since 2012 and belief and doubt both rising.
#nasa
fromFuturism
1 day ago

NASA Now Letting Mars Rover Drive Autonomously

"Engineers at [Jet Propulsion Laboratory] meticulously plan each day of the rover's activities on Mars,"
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Inside the Secret Soundscape of Hawaii's Rarest Seal

Hawaiian monk seals exhibit at least 25 distinct underwater vocalizations, including 20 previously undescribed calls revealed by extensive acoustic monitoring.
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fromwww.mercurynews.com
1 day ago

Saratoga High senior discovers link between whale songs and human sonatas

Humpback whale songs exhibit structural patterns analogous to human sonata form: exposition, development, and recapitulation.
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fromThe Mercury News
1 day ago

Saratoga High senior discovers link between whale songs and human sonatas

Humpback whale songs display structural patterns analogous to human sonata form—exposition, development, and recapitulation.
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fromSlate Magazine
1 day ago

The Truth About That Scary New Glacier Study

The world is losing roughly 1,000 glaciers per year, a rate likely to increase, with profound local cultural, economic, and ecological consequences.
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fromArs Technica
1 day ago

The evolution of expendability: Why some ants traded armor for numbers

Large ant colonies evolve workers with reduced, lower-cost exoskeletons, trading individual armor quality for workforce quantity and collective resilience.
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fromwww.nature.com
2 days ago

Author Correction: Cryo-EM structure of a natural RNA nanocage

Figure colours corrected: Fig. 2a dark green and pink swapped; Fig. 3c top/bottom colours reversed; Fig. 5c blue replaced with lime green.
#interstellar-comet
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fromBig Think
1 day ago

Ask Ethan: Can stars form within the expanding Universe?

Stars formed early because local overdensities and gravitational collapse overcame cosmic expansion despite low mean density and accelerating expansion.
fromwww.dw.com
5 months ago

3I/ATLAS: Interstellar comet comes closest to Earth DW 12/19/2025

In the early morning hours of Friday, December 19, you could spot the visitor from another solar system in the sky with a serious telescope, that is. Comet 3I/ATLAS flew by Earth at a distance of 270 million kilometers (168 million miles). That was its closest approach to our planet. From here, the comet will continue its journey and pass by Jupiter in early 2026 before crossing the orbits of Saturn, Uranus and Neptune by 2028 and then leaving our solar system.
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fromNature
3 days ago

Science in 2026: the events to watch for in the coming year

AI-driven research and specialized small models accelerate scientific discovery; gene-editing clinical trials and a large early-cancer blood-screening trial are advancing next year.
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fromNextgov.com
2 days ago

Inside the White House meeting on its AI Genesis Mission

24 private companies will partner with the Department of Energy and national laboratories to form an AI-driven American Science and Security Platform for scientific advancement.
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fromThe New Yorker
2 days ago

How America Gave China an Edge in Nuclear Power

China's most advanced molten-salt reactor, based on 1960s U.S. MSRE collaboration, achieves online refueling and narrows the U.S.–China nuclear-technology gap.
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fromTechzine Global
2 days ago

How close is China's EUV project to eliminating ASML's monopoly?

China appears to have developed a working prototype EUV-capable chipmaking system, potentially enabling domestically produced EUV processors by 2028.
fromEngadget
3 days ago

China reportedly has a prototype EUV machine built by ex-ASML employees

Sources told the publication that a team in Shenzhen completed the prototype of an extreme ultraviolet lithography machine earlier this year and it is allegedly now undergoing testing. The EUV machine was reportedly made by former engineers from Dutch semiconductor supplier ASML. Reuters states that China is targeting production of its own EUV chips beginning in 2028, although other experts have projected 2030 as a more likely date.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

The 10 Most Mind-Blowing Discoveries About the Brain in 2025

The human brain has 86 billion neurons connected by roughly 100 trillion synapses, making it one of the most complex objects in the known universe. Each year neuroscientists make fascinating, important and downright strange discoveries about how this resilient structure works, and 2025 didn't disappoint. Here are 10 of the most fascinating brain discoveries of this year for your own brain to noodle on.
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fromNature
3 days ago

Point of no returns: researchers are crossing a threshold in the fight for funding

Competition for scarce funding shapes academic priorities and can push researchers to prioritize grant-winning over scientific inquiry.
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fromAsteriskmag
2 days ago

Ideas Aren't Getting Harder to Find-Asterisk

Productivity growth has slowed since the 1970s because markets have become less effective at turning innovations into productivity gains, not because ideas ran out.
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fromarstechnica.com
2 days ago

The inside story of SpaceX's historic rocket landing that changed launch forever

SpaceX achieved the first-ever orbital rocket launch and controlled landing, completing multiple major upgrades and saving its return-to-flight mission in a single, historic ORBCOMM flight.
#maven
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fromArs Technica
2 days ago

LLMs' impact on science: Booming publications, stagnating quality

Non-native English researchers increasingly use LLMs to overcome writing barriers, increasing submissions but producing more complex language that correlates less with publication.
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fromNews Center
2 days ago

Common Virus 'Rewires' Intracellular Mechanisms to Promote Infection - News Center

HCMV encodes a kinase that disrupts lamin A/C to rewire nuclear–cytoskeletal interactions, altering nuclear shape and movement to promote cell migration and infection.
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fromNews Center
2 days ago

Exploring the Connection Between Gene Expression and Aging - News Center

Transcription elongation factors NELF and SPT6 regulate RNA isoform production and directly influence cellular senescence and age-related transcriptional programs.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

Igloos on Mars? How Future Astronauts Could Use Ice to Survive

Transparent domes built from Martian ice could shelter humans, admit sunlight while blocking harmful ultraviolet rays, and provide living and agricultural space.
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fromBig Think
2 days ago

Earth's complex life began with a fungus

Fungi evolved early as eukaryotic, spore-reproducing organisms with flagella in aquatic environments, later diversifying into terrestrial, nonmotile lineages.
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fromArs Technica
2 days ago

NASA will soon find out if the Perseverance rover can really persevere on Mars

Perseverance remains healthy and capable, with JPL certifying drives up to 100 kilometers while Mars Sample Return planning stalls and launch likely slips into the 2030s.
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fromThe Atlantic
2 days ago

Day 18 of the 2025 Space Telescope Advent Calendar: A Spider Among the Stars

The Red Spider Nebula, 5,000 light-years away, shows a dying star's ejected glowing outer layers imaged by the James Webb Space Telescope.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

Here's How Much Practice You Need to Become the Best in the World

What does it take to become the best at something? The answer may not lie in early childhood practice or in lifelong, laser-focused dedication. Instead the path to becoming exceptional at a skill might look a lot more like meandering. That's according to a new paper, published today in Science, that seeks to untangle what it takes to excel across different disciplines, from sports to chess to classical music.
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#3iatlas
fromFast Company
2 days ago
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Interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS: Live tracker, best view time, NASA updates as object passes near Earth

fromFast Company
2 days ago
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Interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS: Live tracker, best view time, NASA updates as object passes near Earth

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fromLos Angeles Times
2 days ago

Years of planning culminate in 'baby boom' of great apes at L.A. Zoo. Here's how they did it

L.A. Zoo experienced a baby boom of great apes — multiple gorillas, chimpanzees, and an orangutan — with attentive maternal care and keeper support.
fromNature
3 days ago

Hot spot: plants use infrared signals to say they're ready to reproduce

Some cycads warm up their reproductive organs to attract specially equipped pollinating beetles in the dark.
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fromBig Think
2 days ago

The evolutionary logic of survival and death, in 54 minutes

So evolution, what it really means is change over time. So we wanna know how that change occurs over time. And there's two dimensions to this process, and it kind of works like a staircase. And one process is mutation, and that's the rise in the staircase. Those occur by chance. If mutation didn't happen, all things would be identical. So you need mutation to make individuals different from one another.
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fromBig Think
2 days ago

10 solstice facts for everyone to know

This December, like every December, will include a single moment - often marked by a particular day, which is December 21st here in 2025 - where our planet's axial tilt is perfectly aligned with the invisible line connecting the Earth to the Sun. In December, it's the northern hemisphere's pole that's tilted away from the Sun, while the southern hemisphere's pole is tipped towards it; in June, the opposite situation is true.
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fromFast Company
3 days ago

A faster-than-light spaceship would actually look a lot like Star Trek's Enterprise

A feasible warp-drive geometry resembling Star Trek's Enterprise, with twin nacelles around a central habitable zone, has been proposed using updated mathematics.
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fromNature
4 days ago

MIT fusion-lab head shot dead: a horror 'impossible to believe'

MIT plasma physicist Nuno Loureiro was fatally shot at his Brookline home; police are investigating the death as a homicide.
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fromFuturism
3 days ago

MIT Fusion Physicist Murdered in His Home

Nuno Loureiro, a leading MIT plasma physicist and fusion researcher, was murdered in his Brookline home at age 47; investigation is ongoing.
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fromBig Think
3 days ago

The USA's Genesis Mission: moonshot or madness?

The Department of Energy's Genesis Mission aims to integrate AI across all 17 National Laboratories, promising transformative science while posing significant risks to scientific future.
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fromNature
4 days ago

An 11-qubit atom processor in silicon - Nature

Precision-placed phosphorus atoms in silicon enable long coherence, ancilla-based QND readout, native multi-qubit gates, and >99% nuclear CZ fidelities for scalable quantum processors.
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fromFortune
3 days ago

Quantum computing could be a $198 billion industry in the next 15 years, Jefferies analyst says | Fortune

Quantum computing currently generates about $1 billion in revenue with a potential total addressable market up to $198 billion by 2040.
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fromNature
4 days ago

Seven feel-good science stories to restore your faith in 2025

US political upheaval and funding cuts threaten science, while international conservation gains, a High Seas Treaty and a shrinking Antarctic ozone hole mark 2025 progress.
#titan
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

The Hidden Connection Between Information and Consciousness

The ordered state is a low-entropy state, and entropy measures the system's proximity to the most probable (equilibrium) state. Therefore, a system is "far from equilibrium" if its components are statistically correlated, because correlation among components is order. When parts are correlated rather than independent, you have structure.The system occupies a state that's improbable relative to chance. You can predict something about one part by knowing about another.
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fromNature
4 days ago

I've earned my PhD - what now?

Many new PhD graduates face an identity and career crossroads and can find alternative scientific careers through networking, short-term roles, and exploring nonacademic options.
fromWIRED
3 days ago

Former Neuralink Exec Launches Organ Preservation Effort

Alameda, California-based Science is aiming to improve on current perfusion systems that continuously circulate blood through vital organs when they can no longer function on their own. The technology is used to preserve organs for transplant and as a life-support measure for patients when the heart and lungs stop working, but it's clunky and costly. Science wants to make a smaller, more portable system that could provide long-term support.
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fromNature
4 days ago

How the Romans built their empire of concrete

A unique archaeological site at Pompeii, Italy, reveals the secrets of peculiarly durable Roman building materials.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 days ago

Strange Cosmic Blast May Be First-Ever Superkilonova Observed

Astronomers may have discovered a never-before-seen cosmic explosion that effectively combines a supernova with a kilonovathe blast that results when two dead, dense stars collide. When massive stars run out of fuel for nuclear fusion, they collapse, triggering a huge explosion called a supernova that blasts light out into space. These cataclysms sometimes leave behind a small dead corea dense object made mostly of neutrons called a neutron star.
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fromNews Center
3 days ago

Noninvasive Treatment Boosts Immune Response Against Glioblastoma - News Center

Noninvasive spherical nucleic acid nanomedicine aims to overcome glioblastoma immunosuppression and improve delivery and efficacy of immunotherapy against 'cold' brain tumors.
#jared-isaacman
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fromNature
4 days ago

An integrated view of the structure and function of the human 4D nucleome - Nature

Protocol for preparing H1 cell ultrathin cryosections, immunolabeling nuclei, and collecting nuclear profiles for multiplexGAM by laser microdissection in three-NP pools.
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fromBig Think
3 days ago

The next revolution in neuroscience is happening outside the lab

Neuroscience historically focused on isolated circuits in constrained lab tasks, neglecting neural activity during natural behavior; new technologies now enable studies of freely moving subjects.
#exoplanet
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fromArs Technica
3 days ago

Physicists 3D-printed a Christmas tree of ice

Evaporative cooling enables low-cost vacuum-chamber 3D printing of an 8 cm ice Christmas tree without refrigeration or cryogenics.
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fromNature
4 days ago

Is bird flu the next pandemic? The science so far

H5N1 avian influenza is spreading globally among birds and mammals, increasing pandemic risk and requiring surveillance, preparedness, and prevention measures.
fromHarvard Gazette
3 days ago

Stopping the next pandemic - Harvard Gazette

A team of researchers from the Broad Institute and Harvard began to suspect nearly two decades ago that so-called "emerging diseases" such as Ebola and Lassa virus were not quite what they seemed. Rather than being newly evolved contagions, mounting evidence suggested they were ancient pathogens that had circulated among humans for thousands of years. What really was emerging was accurate diagnosis: Medicine only recently had acquired the ability to detect these diseases and track the toll of outbreaks.
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fromNature
4 days ago

Astrocyte CCN1 stabilizes neural circuits in the adult brain - Nature

Rats and mice were maintained under controlled housing and used in genetically defined mouse lines, including astrocyte-Ribotag and tamoxifen-inducible Ccn1 conditional knockouts, with blinded analysis.
fromNature
4 days ago

GTP release-selective agonists prolong opioid analgesic efficacy - Nature

Heterotrimeric G proteins transduce information to intracellular partners by modulating GTP binding and hydrolysis3. Through their interaction with G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) and effectors, G proteins provide the transducer function that is necessary for the conveyance of extracellular information4,5. Heterotrimeric G proteins consist of an α subunit bound to a β and γ subunit dimer; they remain a trimer while the α subunit is bound to GDP6.
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fromNature
4 days ago

A universal flu vaccine has proved challenging - could it finally be possible?

On the basis of surveillance data on which strains were circulating, the WHO selected four that would become the foundation of that year's vaccine. One was an H3N2 virus strain that was the most prevalent of that particular subtype, at that moment. But by the time the vaccine was making its way into people's arms that autumn, a different version of the virus had taken over - and the vaccine was only 6% effective at protecting against it.
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