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fromTheregister
59 minutes ago

Japan loses another H3 launcher, plus a navigation sat

Japan's H3 rocket now has a 25 percent failure rate after its eighth launch failed when the second stage engine's second ignition shut down prematurely.
fromSFGATE
1 hour ago

Over 300 earthquakes relentlessly rattle San Ramon

"This is a lot of shaking for the people in the San Ramon area to deal with," Sarah Minson, a research geophysicist with the U.S. Geological Survey's Earthquake Science Center at California's Moffett Field, told SFGATE. "It's quite understandable that this can be incredibly scary and emotionally impactful, even if it's not likely to be physically damaging or related to any sort of threat of a larger magnitude earthquake."
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fromTheregister
13 hours ago

AI is rewriting how power flows through the datacenter

Power semiconductors will become as crucial as GPUs and CPUs in datacenters by enabling compact, high-frequency solid-state transformers to handle rising AI infrastructure power demands.
#research-funding
fromNature
5 days ago
Science

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

fromNature
5 days ago
Science

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

fromNature
5 days ago
Science

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

fromNature
5 days ago
Science

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

Science
fromPhys
4 hours ago

Working in groups can help Republicans and Democrats agree on controversial content moderation online

Working in teams enables content moderators across political divides to reach near-perfect agreement on classifying controversial social media content.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
5 hours ago

The Most Jaw-Dropping Space Images of 2025, Revealed

2025 delivered advances in astronomy and spaceflight: Rubin Observatory first light, Webb images of Apep, and Blue Origin's New Glenn inaugural launch with NASA payloads.
#rocket-lab
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
5 hours ago

The Protectors: Inside the Desperate Rush to Save an Orca Community

Subscribe to Scientific American to support science journalism and receive essential news, podcasts, infographics, videos, games, and the science world's best writing.
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
11 hours ago

Patches of the moon to become spacecraft graveyards, say researchers

Concentrated lunar crash sites will accumulate defunct satellites, risking damage to scientific instruments, historic sites, and future lunar infrastructure.
Science
fromFuturism
9 hours ago

Astronauts Suit Up for Their Journey to the Moon

Four astronauts will fly around the Moon on Artemis 2, becoming the first humans beyond Earth's gravity well in over fifty years.
Science
fromThe Atlantic
4 hours ago

Today's Atlantic Trivia: All Downhill From Here?

Anders Celsius established the centigrade scale on December 25, 1741; Halley's Comet returned as predicted 17 years later, and tropical zenith produces Lāhainā Noon.
Science
fromNews Center
9 hours ago

Scientists Map the Human Genome in 4D - News Center

High-resolution, time-resolved 3D genome maps reveal chromatin loops, compartments, and dynamic folding that regulate gene activity and influence development, identity, and disease.
#interstellar-object
fromFuturism
6 hours ago
Science

We Could Hitch a Ride to Unknown Frontiers on Super-Fast Interstellar Objects Like 3I/ATLAS

fromFuturism
6 hours ago
Science

We Could Hitch a Ride to Unknown Frontiers on Super-Fast Interstellar Objects Like 3I/ATLAS

fromwww.theguardian.com
6 hours ago

Yellowstone hot spring spews forth spectacular muddy plumes

A hot spring in Yellowstone national park that erupts sporadically was captured on an official camera exploding in spectacular muddy plumes at the weekend. Volcanic experts at the US Geological Survey described the eruption as simply Kablooey! The tumult occurred at the Black Diamond Pool in Yellowstone on Saturday morning and provided dramatic footage. Video shared by the USGS on social media shows mud spraying up and out from the murky hot spring just before 9.23am local time in Biscuit Basin.
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
18 hours ago

Stargazing in the Lake District: a new forest observatory opens in Grizedale

A tawny owl screeches nearby in the dark and her mate replies, hooting eerily from the forest below. A white dome floats in the gloaming above a plain black doorway outlined with red light, like a portal to another dimension. I'm in Grizedale Forest, far from any light-polluting cities, to visit the Lake District's first public observatory and planetarium, which opened in May.
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fromwww.dw.com
13 hours ago

Uncovering the mystery behind colorful aurora skies DW 12/22/2025

Auroras form when solar charged particles collide with atmospheric atoms, producing colors (green from oxygen; purple/blue/pink from nitrogen) usually near the poles.
Science
fromFuturism
4 hours ago

Korea Tests Ultra-Rugged Robot to Explore the Moon's Mysterious Caves

Expandable helix-woven flexible-metal wheels enable a rover to traverse lunar-cave-like terrain, absorb impacts, and adapt size for robust exploration and tight-entry access.
Science
fromBig Think
18 hours ago

How recently have we understood the Universe?

Human understanding of the cosmos advanced gradually through millennia of observations and discoveries, culminating in modern findings like dark matter, dark energy, and cosmic inflation.
fromwww.npr.org
1 day ago

How a power outage in Colorado caused U.S. official time be 4.8 microseconds off

"The lapse \"resulted in NIST UTC [universal coordinated time] being 4.8 microseconds slower than it should have been,\" NIST spokesperson Rebecca Jacobson said in an email. That's just under 5 millionths of a second. To understand just how brief an instant that is, Jacobson noted that it takes a person about 350,000 microseconds to blink."
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fromAnOther
15 hours ago

Read: Camilla Grudova's Gluttonous Short Story, Glamour Dish

A jailed professor relies entirely on a former assistant to bring him food while the assistant endures social exile and low-paid work after academic ruin.
Science
fromwww.dw.com
15 hours ago

Women get drunk faster than men due to biology not tolerance DW 12/22/2025

Women, on average, experience stronger and faster effects of alcohol than men due to biological differences in absorption, metabolism, and brain response.
Science
fromNature
6 days ago

Biobanks reveal genetic complexity in human evolution

Some tiny genetic differences between Homo sapiens and Neanderthals/Denisovans may not meaningfully distinguish human behavior or biology.
Science
fromInsideHook
1 day ago

The Pandemic Changed the Shape of Birds' Beaks

Dark-eyed juncos near UCLA developed beak shapes resembling wildland birds during COVID lockdowns when human food waste declined, then reverted after restrictions lifted.
Science
fromWIRED
10 hours ago

The Doomsday Glacier Is Getting Closer and Closer to Irreversible Collapse

Crack growth in Thwaites Glacier's eastern ice shelf has weakened its anchorage to a mid-ocean ridge, accelerating upstream ice flow and destabilizing the glacier.
Science
fromPsychology Today
9 hours ago

Left-Handedness and Brain Asymmetries: How Are They Linked?

Left-handed people show reduced brain asymmetries compared to right-handers across multiple functional domains.
#james-webb-space-telescope
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 hour ago

Pink platypus spotted in Gippsland is cute but don't get too excited

Cody Stylianou thought he saw a huge trout. But, skimming just below the surface, it was moving differently than a fish would. The creature surfaced and, amazed, the Victorian fisher reached for his phone. Swimming in front of him was a pink platypus. Stylianou regularly fishes in the Gippsland spot, which he is keeping secret to protect the rare animal. He thinks it could be the same one he saw years ago, just older and bigger.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
5 hours ago

Ancient Romans Guarding Hadrian's Wall Were Riddled with Worms and Parasites

Ancient Romans at Vindolanda were infected with roundworm, whipworm, and Giardia due to fecal contamination of latrines and likely drinking water.
fromFuturism
2 days 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."
Science
fromFuturism
1 day ago

Rats Successfully Trained to Shoot Demons in "Doom"

With the use of a bootstrap experimental setup consisting of a large polystyrene ball, a curved computer monitor, and a small straw that dispenses sugar water, Tóth managed to teach a rat how to play the classic 1994 video game Doom II. The rat's movements translated into rotations of the ball, which were then translated into movement inside the iconic first-person shooter. The sugar water served as a treat whenever the rat completed a milestone, like walking down a corridor.
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fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

"Stop": How Visual Cues Trigger Automatic Reactions

The cerebellum transforms visual cues into automatic, predictive motor commands, enabling muscle memory and high-speed unconscious actions via Purkinje-cell–driven learning.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

There's a new space race will the billionaires win?

If there is one thing we can rely on in this world, it is human hubris, and space and astronomy are no exception. The ancients believed that everything revolved around Earth. In the 16th century, Copernicus and his peers overturned that view with the heliocentric model. Since then, telescopes and spacecraft have revealed just how insignificant we are. There are hundreds of billions of stars in our galaxy, the Milky Way, each star a sun
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Science
fromTheregister
1 day ago

NIST warns of NTP inaccuracy after blackouts across Colorado

NIST's Boulder atomic clock ensemble failed during a prolonged power outage, causing inaccurate NTP time while backup generators kept servers running.
from24/7 Wall St.
1 day ago

30 Military Weapons That Seemed Perfect, Until They Entered Combat

Military weapons are often introduced with bold promises like greater efficiency, revolutionary design, and battlefield dominance on paper. But war has a way of stripping those promises down to their essentials. When weapons leave testing ranges and enter real combat, factors like dirt, stress, logistics, and human error quickly expose weaknesses that no specification sheet can predict, or any human for that matter. Here, 24/7 Wall St. is taking a look at some of these weapons that did not hold up under the pressures of combat.
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fromWIRED
1 day ago

Research Reveals the Optimal Way to Optimize

George Dantzig developed the simplex method, enabling efficient large-scale optimization for military logistics and modern supply-chain decision-making.
Science
fromwww.npr.org
1 day ago

Scientists say they have discovered 20 new species deep in the Pacific Ocean

Scientists discovered at least 20 likely new species in deep Guam coral reefs after retrieving ARMS devices from the 180–330 foot mesopelagic "upper twilight zone."
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Do prawns feel pain? Why scientists are urging a rethink of Australia's favoured festive food

Decapod crustaceans exhibit behaviors and neurological evidence consistent with sentience, including fear, pain, learning, memory, problem-solving, and social relationships.
fromFuturism
1 day ago

James Webb Discovers Planet Shaped Like Lemon

The roughly Jupiter-mass object, designated PSR J2322-2650b, orbits just one million miles away from its star, or one percent of the Earth's distance from the Sun, with a single "year" lasting just 7.8 Earth hours. And at such proximity, the extreme gravity of the star - an exotic type known as a pulsar - pulls the entire planet into an oblong shape, like a lemon or a football.
Science
Science
fromABC7 Los Angeles
1 day ago

Shortest day of the year is descending on the Northern Hemisphere. Here's what to know

Winter solstice produces the shortest Northern Hemisphere day as Earth's axial tilt reaches its maximum lean away from the sun, after which daylight increases.
fromwww.nytimes.com
1 day ago

This City's Best Winter Show Is in Its Pitch-Dark Skies

In the days leading up to the winter solstice, amber streetlights switch on ever earlier as dusk falls over Flagstaff, Ariz., casting the city in a soft, warm hue. Longer nights mean even more time to spend under hundreds of stars and the cloudy swath of the Milky Way galaxy, which are visible even from the city's downtown. Spectacular views of the night sky are a given for the more than 77,000 residents of the world's first and largest dark sky city,
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fromThe Atlantic
1 day ago

Day 21 of the 2025 Space Telescope Advent Calendar: Warped Space

Galaxy Cluster Abell 209's mass warps and magnifies background galaxies via gravitational lensing, producing stretched and smeared clumps visible in Hubble images.
Science
fromFast Company
1 day ago

How Santa (and you) can find the right North Pole, even as it keeps moving

Geographic north (Earth's rotational axis) and magnetic north (compass direction) are different, so compasses do not point to true north.
Science
fromFuturism
2 days 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
2 days 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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Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days 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.
Science
fromFuturism
2 days 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
Science
fromTravel + Leisure
2 days 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.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days 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
2 days 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.
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days 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
4 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.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 days ago

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

Stopping Earth's rotation would release enormous kinetic energy that would vaporize oceans and devastate the surface but would not melt the entire planet.
fromNature
4 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.
Science
Science
fromArs Technica
3 days 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
3 days 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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Science
fromEngadget
3 days 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.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 days 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.
Science
fromArs Technica
3 days 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.
Science
fromArs Technica
3 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.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 days 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
3 days 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
4 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
3 days 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
3 days 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
fromBusiness Insider
3 days ago
Science

NASA's new boss says the race is on between SpaceX and Blue Origin to build a moon lander

NASA will select whichever company—SpaceX or Blue Origin—completes a functional lunar lander first to carry astronauts to the Moon.
fromTheregister
4 days ago
Science

Isaacman confirmed as NASA boss after Trump-Musk dust off

Jared Isaacman confirmed as NASA administrator amid budget turmoil, workforce disruptions, scrutiny over SpaceX ties, and proposals to increase commercial involvement in agency operations.
fromFuturism
3 days 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
3 days 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.
Science
fromwww.mercurynews.com
3 days 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.
Science
fromThe Mercury News
3 days 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.
Science
fromSlate Magazine
3 days 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.
Science
fromArs Technica
3 days 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.
Science
fromwww.nature.com
4 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.
Science
fromwww.dailymail.co.uk
3 days ago

Interstellar comet 3l/ATLAS passes Earth and heads towards Jupiter

Interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS passed Earth at 168 million miles, will fly by Jupiter March 16, 2026, then travel outward and leave the solar system mid-2030s.
Science
fromBig Think
3 days 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.
Science
fromNature
5 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.
Science
fromNextgov.com
4 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.
Science
fromThe New Yorker
4 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.
Science
fromTechzine Global
4 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.
Science
fromEngadget
5 days ago

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

China developed a prototype extreme ultraviolet lithography machine that can generate EUV light, advancing plans for domestically produced advanced semiconductor chips by 2028.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
4 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.
Science
Science
fromAsteriskmag
4 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.
Science
fromarstechnica.com
4 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.
Science
fromFuturism
4 days ago

NASA's Mars Spacecraft Spinning Helplessly After Signal Lost

NASA lost contact with the MAVEN Mars orbiter after it emerged rotating unpredictably; recovery efforts and surface-operations mitigation continue using other orbiters.
Science
fromArs Technica
4 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.
Science
fromNews Center
4 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.
Science
fromNews Center
4 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.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
4 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.
Science
fromBig Think
4 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.
Science
fromArs Technica
4 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.
Science
fromThe Atlantic
4 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.
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