Science

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fromABC7 San Francisco
42 minutes ago

California Academy of Sciences team finds ocean warming reaching deeper than expected

Deep coral reefs in the Twilight Zone harbor many distinct, previously unknown species but remain poorly studied due to extreme depth, cost, and logistical challenges.
Science
fromSilicon Canals
1 hour ago

Farmers' Almanac was right again: here's what they predict for the rest of winter - Silicon Canals

The Farmers' Almanac maintains roughly 80–85% historical accuracy and predicts continued winter storms and wild temperature swings across February and March.
Science
fromFuturism
3 hours ago

SpaceX Just Bought Elon Musk's CSAM Company

SpaceX acquired xAI, creating a privately valued $1.25 trillion company while integrating AI, rockets, space internet, and controversial Grok chatbot capabilities.
#longevity
fromNature
4 days ago
Science

Daily briefing: Why we enjoy things more when they're hard to get

Genetics explain about 55% of lifespan variation; distinctive brain-wave shifts mark propofol-induced unconsciousness; AI aims to speed small-molecule synthesis.
fromInsideHook
3 days ago
Science

How Much of Your Longevity Is Inherited?

Genetics account for over 50% of intrinsic human lifespan heritability, while extrinsic mortality previously masked genetic contributions.
Science
fromNature
1 day ago

See the Sun expand and contract like a pufferfish - January's best science images

Coronal data reveal the Sun’s outer atmosphere expands and contracts like a pufferfish, improving prediction of solar activity impacts on Earth and technology.
#artemis-ii
fromJezebel
4 hours ago
Science

Humans May Return to the Moon This Week. Are Americans Even Aware It's Happening?

Science
fromTravel + Leisure
1 day ago

February Has 8 Night Sky Wonders-Including a 6-Planet Parade, a 'Ring of Fire' Eclipse and a Once-in-decades Moon Mission

February offers daytime and nighttime sky events: a solar eclipse, planet parade, Artemis II lunar launch window, Snow Moon, Mercury visibility, and meteor activity.
Science
fromMail Online
2 days ago

The 5 worst-case scenarios for NASA's Artemis II moon mission

Artemis II will carry four astronauts to lunar orbit using advanced abort and evacuation systems to address launch, flight, health, and re-entry risks.
fromJezebel
4 hours ago
Science

Humans May Return to the Moon This Week. Are Americans Even Aware It's Happening?

fromTravel + Leisure
1 day ago
Science

February Has 8 Night Sky Wonders-Including a 6-Planet Parade, a 'Ring of Fire' Eclipse and a Once-in-decades Moon Mission

#jupiter
Science
fromFuncheap
10 hours ago

Night of Science: Fact, Fiction, and the Future of Autism Research (SF)

An evening public event presents Dr. Matt State and Victoria Colliver for talks and a fireside chat on autism and neuropsychiatric research, followed by a public Q&A.
Science
from24/7 Wall St.
7 hours ago

30 Aircraft That Were Technological Marvels But Also Operational Headaches

Technological breakthroughs in advanced aircraft often produced unmatched capabilities but caused intense maintenance, logistics, and readiness challenges that undermined long-term operational effectiveness.
Science
fromThe Verge
5 hours ago

Notepad++ updates got hijacked for months and could have spied for China

Notepad++ hosting servers were hijacked June–December 2, 2025, allowing targeted users to receive malicious updates that likely enabled remote keyboard access by Chinese state-sponsored hackers.
fromNature
1 day ago

Long-lived remote ion-ion entanglement for scalable quantum repeaters - Nature

Hefei National Research Center for Physical Sciences at the Microscale and School of Physical Sciences, University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei, Anhui, China Wen-Zhao Liu, Ya-Bin Zhou, Jiu-Peng Chen, Ao Teng, Xiao-Wen Han, Guang-Cheng Liu, Zhi-Jiong Zhang, Yi Yang, Feng-Guang Liu, Chao-Hui Xue, Bo-Wen Yang, Jin Yang, Chao Zeng, Yi-Zheng Zhen, Feihu Xu, Ye Wang, Yong Wan, Qiang Zhang & Jian-Wei Pan
Science
fromNature Partnerships
4 hours ago

Promote your products to scientists | Nature Partnerhships

Reach over 43 million monthly users across Nature, Springer, BMC, and Scientific American to target scientists, healthcare professionals, policymakers, and engaged readers.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
6 hours ago

The sun just unleashed its most powerful solar flare in years

The sun is putting on a show. On Sunday the star unleashed several strong and bright solar flares, including one of the most powerful eruptions seen in decades. Far from the steadily glowing orb we sometimes picture, the sun's surface is made up of roiling plasma thrown about by twisting magnetic fields. When these fields snap, they can throw out huge bursts of energy and charged particles into spacea solar flare.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
9 hours ago

Astronomers have won the latest battle over dark skies, but the global conflict continues

Last week AES Andesa subsidiary of the AES Corporation, an American energy companyannounced it had scrapped its plans for a sprawling, city-size renewable energy project in Chile's Atacama Desert. The Atacama offers some of the world's darkest, clearest skieswhich is why it also hosts several of Earth's most important ground-based telescopes, including those of the European Southern Observatory's (ESO's) Paranal Observatory, which could've been within a mere five kilometers of the green-energy facility, according to earlier plans.
Science
fromThe Walrus
15 hours ago

Canada Is Building a Surveillance Network in Space | The Walrus

Our iron giant is a deep space radio telescope, with an antenna dish measuring forty-six metres across, the largest instrument of its kind in Canada. Starting in the 1960s, the Algonquin Radio Observatory performed a number of cutting-edge scientific projects, including joining SETI's early efforts, in the 1970s and 1980s, to find signatures of alien life-spectrum emissions from water molecules, artificial transmitter signals. No luck.
Science
Science
fromtheconversation.com
11 hours ago

Is time a fundamental part of reality? A quiet revolution in physics suggests not

Different fundamental physical theories treat time incompatibly, causing time to stretch, slow, or even disappear when those frameworks are combined.
Science
fromFortune
16 hours ago

Singapore to establish national space agency to seize opportunities in space economy | Fortune

Singapore will launch its first national space agency in April to lead growth of its space industry, expand national capabilities, and build global partnerships.
fromNews Center
10 hours ago

Identifying Mechanisms Supporting Nanoparticle Therapy for Autoimmune Diseases - News Center

We knew that if you inject these nanoparticles into an animal model, the nanoparticles get taken up by antigen presenting cells and this resulted in increased regulatory T-cells and decreased inflammatory disease. However, we did not know how this happens,
Science
Science
fromMail Online
6 hours ago

Epstein's secret plans to fund designer baby clinics revealed in files

Jeffrey Epstein helped bankroll a plan with Bryan Bishop to create a genetically engineered human birth and potentially a human clone within five years.
Science
fromThe Mercury News
11 hours ago

Eight more earthquakes jolt San Ramon area. Biggest is 4.2

Eight earthquakes struck the Tri-Valley within an hour, including a magnitude 4.2 centered about 2.5 miles southeast of downtown San Ramon.
fromBig Think
19 hours ago

JWST shakes up the hunt for earliest galaxy cluster

The Hubble Space Telescope displayed what the Universe looks like. Its successor, JWST, now reveals how the Universe grew up. Galaxies formed and grew massive swiftly: requiring under 300 million years. Larger-scale, more massive structures, like galaxy clusters, take longer. The earliest mature, fully-fledged cluster is CL J1001+0220. Simulations predict such clusters to appear late: after 2-3 billion years. However, proto-clusters, or still-forming galaxy clusters, appear far earlier.
Science
#groundhog-day
fromFortune
11 hours ago
Science

America's most famous groundhog sees his shadow, predicting 6 more weeks of winter weather | Fortune

fromFortune
11 hours ago
Science

America's most famous groundhog sees his shadow, predicting 6 more weeks of winter weather | Fortune

Science
fromsfist.com
10 hours ago

Another Series of San Ramon Earthquakes Rumbles Under East Bay

A swarm of small earthquakes near San Ramon, including a 4.2M, rattled the East Bay and was felt in parts of San Francisco.
Science
fromFuncheap
9 hours ago

Super Bowl Watch Party + Free Buffet (Pacifica)

All-ages outdoor watch party at Pacifica with free buffet where attendees cheer for both teams to lose.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
5 hours ago

New chicken-sized dinosaur baffles paleontologists

Foskeia pelendonum was a tiny, chicken-sized Early Cretaceous herbivorous dinosaur from northern Spain with unusual skull and teeth indicating novel feeding behavior and evolutionary implications.
Science
fromThe Washington Post
16 hours ago

Why do dead leaves stay on trees during winter?

Certain deciduous species, notably oaks and beeches, retain dead leaves through winter (leaf marcescence), a trait with multiple unresolved evolutionary explanations.
Science
fromMail Online
16 hours ago

Homosexuality may have evolved as a 'survival strategy', study claims

Same-sex behaviors in primates increase in harsh environments and within larger, more complex social groups, possibly strengthening bonds that aid group survival.
Science
fromFortune
1 day ago

The Chan Zuckerberg Initiative cut 70 jobs as the Meta CEO's philanthropy goes all in on mission to 'cure or prevent all disease' | Fortune

Chan Zuckerberg Initiative cut about 70 jobs to refocus philanthropy on AI-powered biomedical research and expand its Biohub network.
Science
fromArs Technica
2 days ago

Research roundup: 6 cool stories we almost missed

Mineral fingerprinting and zircon analysis indicate humans transported Stonehenge stones from distant quarries, not glaciers.
fromThe Mercury News
1 day ago

Here's a look at the significance of sending animals to space

On May 5, 1961, Alan Shepard became the first American in space. However, three months earlier NASA had launched "Number 65" on a mission that helped pave the way for Shephard's momentous flight. Number 65 was a male chimpanzee born in 1957 in the French Cameroons in West Africa. After being captured by trappers, he was sent to a rare bird farm in Florida.
Science
fromwww.ocregister.com
1 day ago

Here's a look at the significance of sending animals to space

Jan. 31 marks the day Ham, a chimpanzee, was launched into sub-orbital space in a Mercury capsule aboard a Redstone rocket to become the first great ape in space. On May 5, 1961, Alan Shepard became the first American in space. However, three months earlier NASA had launched Number 65 on a mission that helped pave the way for Shephard's momentous flight.
Science
fromFuturism
1 day ago

Galactic Monsters Grew in Cocoons Like Giant Bugs, Scientists Say

How the most massive objects in the universe first formed is one of the biggest headscratchers in astrophysics. With more advanced telescopes, astronomers have found fully formed galaxies and colossal black holes earlier and earlier in the cosmos, just a few hundred million years after the Big Bang. This shouldn't be enough time for these structures to reach their incredible size; to astronomers, it's like stumbling on a fully-grown oak tree that's only a year old.
Science
fromSilicon Canals
1 day ago

9 quiet signs you're more intelligent than you give yourself credit for, according to psychology - Silicon Canals

Ever notice how the loudest person in the room often gets credited as the smartest? We've been conditioned to equate intelligence with quick comebacks, perfect grades, and the ability to dominate every conversation. But here's what psychology tells us: true intelligence often operates in the background. It shows up in the way you question things, how you process emotions, and even in those moments when you feel like you don't know enough.
Science
Science
fromHigh Country News
1 day ago

Letters to the Editor, February 2026 - High Country News

Western landscapes reveal deep geologic time that fosters awe and perspective, highlighting Earth's ancient processes and humanity's brief place within them.
frominsideevs.com
1 day ago

CATL Says Ultra Fast Charging Won't Kill Its New Battery

CATL says its new 5C batteries will retain 80% of their capacity after 1,400 charge-discharge cycles at 140F (60C). With a theoretical range of 372 miles (600 km) per cycle, that works out to a total of 522,000 miles (840,000 km) in what CATL describes as Dubai summer heat. At a milder ambient temperature of 68F (20C), which is closer to the ideal operating temperature for lithium-ion batteries,
Science
Science
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Beliefs About a Person's True Self Affects Our Evaluations

Observers infer a person's true self from decision conflicts, tending to view instinctual preferences as reflecting that true self.
fromHigh Country News
1 week ago

How to find deep time in Seattle - High Country News

Specifically, I take people around downtown Seattle to explore the stone that makes up our buildings. On the corner of Second Avenue and Cherry Street is an elegant six-story structure built with two-foot-tall blocks of rough-hewn sandstone, about 44 million years old, quarried in Tenino, Washington. The building rose soon after much of downtown Seattle burned to the ground in 1889, and the jagged stone gives it a feeling of rugged permanence, certainly what the city needed after the great fire.
Science
Science
fromFast Company
1 day ago

Groundhogs are bad at predicting weather, but they're valuable animal engineers

Marmots are widespread true hibernators whose extreme physiological changes during prolonged torpor inform biomedical research and enable survival in harsh climates.
fromWIRED
1 day ago

How to Use Physics to Escape an Ice Bowl

I don't know who invented this crazy challenge, but the idea is to put someone in a carved-out ice bowl and see if they can get out. Check it out! The bowl is shaped like the inside of a sphere, so the higher up the sides you go, the steeper it gets. If you think an icy sidewalk is slippery, try going uphill on an icy sidewalk. What do you do when faced with a problem like this? You build a physics model, of course.
Science
Science
fromFuturism
1 day ago

This Photo of Mars at Night Is Straight Up Haunting

Martian nights average about 12 hours and are extremely cold, but Curiosity's LED-equipped instruments illuminate shadowed rock interiors for scientific study.
Science
from48 hills
1 day ago

HIV denialist Peter Duesberg is dead. Good. - 48 hills

Peter Duesberg promoted false AIDS denialism claiming HIV is harmless and blamed drugs, causing harm by undermining effective HIV treatment and prevention.
Science
fromArs Technica
1 day ago

Fungus could be the insecticide of the future

Certain strains of Beauveria bassiana can infect and kill Eurasian spruce bark beetles despite beetles’ enhanced antimicrobial defenses.
Science
fromFuturism
2 days ago

AI Discovers Hundreds of Anomalies in Archive of Hubble Images

A custom AI tool scanned Hubble archives and rapidly detected over 1,300 astrophysical anomalies, many previously undocumented, including galactic mergers and jellyfish galaxies.
#spacex
Science
fromMail Online
2 days ago

New theory hints mysterious forces once haunted the Bermuda Triangle

Methane gas releases from the seafloor may have temporarily reduced water density and disrupted engines, explaining past Bermuda Triangle disappearances without supernatural causes.
Science
fromFuturism
2 days ago

Scientists Testing Controversial Human Rejuvenation Compound Called ER-100

Cellular reprogramming therapies using Yamanaka factors are entering human trials to reset cells and potentially reverse aging-related damage like glaucoma.
#dark-energy-survey
fromNature
4 days ago
Science

Largest galaxy survey yet confirms that the Universe is not clumpy enough

fromNature
4 days ago
Science

Largest galaxy survey yet confirms that the Universe is not clumpy enough

fromTheregister
2 days ago

NASA taps Claude to conjure Mars rover's travel plan

It did so with the blessing of engineers at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), who decided to delegate the meticulous work of route planning to Anthropic's AI model. This involves consulting orbital and surface imagery of Mars in order to set a series of waypoints to guide the rover's movements. Once plotted, this data gets transmitted about 140 million miles or 225 million kilometers - the average distance from Earth to Mars - where it's received by Perseverance as a navigational plan.
Science
Science
fromFuturism
2 days ago

NASA Says Europa Is Covered by a Thick Icy Shell

Europa's icy shell averages about 18 miles thick in the observed region, potentially limiting nutrient and oxygen exchange with its subsurface ocean.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

NASA stresses ISS crew safety as it gears up for next astronaut launch

NASA prioritizes safety for Crew-12 ISS launch after an unprecedented crew evacuation, coordinating its timing with Artemis II's schedule.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

3,000-light-year-long jet offers new clues to first black hole ever imaged

Probable base of M87*'s 3,000-light-year jet identified on the black hole's glowing ring using Event Horizon Telescope observations.
fromThe Atlantic
2 days ago

A $40 Billion Idea to Keep One Glacier From Flooding the Earth

On Thwaites itself, part of the team will try today to drop a fiber-optic cable through a 3,200-foot borehole in the ice, near the glacier's grounding line, where the ocean is eating away at it from below. Sometime in the next week, another part of the team, working from the South Korean icebreaker RV Araon, aims to drop another cable, which a robot will traverse once a day, down to a rocky moraine in the Amundsen Sea.
Science
#blue-origin
fromEngadget
2 days ago
Science

Blue Origin is pausing its space tourist flights to work on lunar landers for NASA

fromEngadget
2 days ago
Science

Blue Origin is pausing its space tourist flights to work on lunar landers for NASA

Science
fromTheoldguybicycleblog
2 days ago

Does Cycling Make You More Creative? Science + What I've Learned After 155,000+ Miles

Cycling, especially steady moderate rides, boosts brain chemicals, reduces stress, and creates mental space that enhances both divergent and convergent creative thinking.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

Another Earth or a blip in the data? We may never find out

A single 2017 Kepler transit suggests a potential Earth-sized, habitable exoplanet orbiting HD 137010, but confirmation remains uncertain.
Science
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Secrets of the Sleeping Beauties of the Animal Kingdom

Some organisms can suspend metabolism for millennia and revive unchanged, carrying survival information throughout their bodies rather than confined to neurons.
fromFuturism
2 days ago

Our Entire Galaxy Appears to Be Embedded in a Colossal Sheet of Dark Matter

The Milky Way - and in fact our entire galactic neighborhood known as the Local Group - appear to be lodged in a vast, extended "sheet" of dark matter flanked on each side by cosmic voids, new research suggests. The findings, described in a new study published in Nature Astronomy, could help explain the puzzling motion exhibited by our nearby galaxies, which seems to defy the gravitational influence of neighboring realms.
Science
#dance-biomechanics
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

Mass grave in Jordan sheds new light on world's earliest recorded pandemic

A US-led research team has verified the first Mediterranean mass grave of the world's earliest recorded pandemic, providing stark new details about the plague of Justinian that killed millions of people in the Byzantine empire between the sixth and eighth centuries. The findings, published in February's Journal of Archaeological Science, offer what researchers say is a rare empirical window into the mobility, urban life and vulnerability of citizens affected by the pestilence.
Science
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fromNature
5 days ago

Daily briefing: Brain-immune crosstalk worsens the damage of heart attacks

Vagus nerve signalling during heart attacks triggers immune-driven inflammation that worsens cardiac damage; blocking those signals improves outcomes in mice and offers therapeutic potential.
Science
fromTNW | Sustainability
1 week ago

Rainbow Weather raises $5.5M to refine real-time weather forecasting

Rainbow Weather raised $5.5M seed to build hyperlocal, minute-by-minute precipitation forecasts using machine learning that fuses radar, satellite, stations, and phone barometers.
Science
fromNature
4 days ago

China is betting on 'optical' computer chips - will they power AI?

Photonic chips that use light could address electronic-chip energy and speed limits, with China leading rapid research growth in the field.
Science
fromThe Cipher Brief
3 days ago

America's Intelligence Satellites are Proliferating: Their Protection is Not, With Exceptions

Many sensitive U.S. national-security satellites remain dangerously exposed to hostile action despite rapid launch cadence and plans for proliferated constellations.
fromEngadget
3 days ago

NASA used Claude to plot a route for its Perseverance rover on Mars

Since 2021, NASA's Perseverance rover has achieved a number of historic milestones, including sending back the first audio recordings from Mars. Now, nearly five years after landing on the Red Planet, it just achieved another feat. This past December, Perseverance successfully completed a route through a section of the Jezero crater plotted by Anthropic's Claude chatbot, marking the first time NASA has used a large language model to pilot the car-sized robot.
Science
fromFuturism
3 days ago

The United States Is Suffering Stomach-Churning Brain Drain

Brain drain refers to circumstances in which highly trained experts from underdeveloped and overexploited countries migrate to wealthier international job markets. Such loss of human capital can be catastrophic for a nation's development, as a shortage of trained workers tends to strain critical sectors like healthcare and education. Now the United States government - which once fielded as many as 281,000 scientists and engineers - is experiencing a similar phenomenon.
Science
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 days ago

Lost ancient Greek star catalog decoded by particle accelerator

Researchers decoded portions of Hipparchus's lost star catalog from a palimpsest using synchrotron imaging, revealing constellation names and measurements.
Science
fromMail Online
3 days ago

Out-of-control Chinese rocket smashes into the South Pacific Ocean

A Chinese Zhuque-3 rocket re-entered and crashed into the southern Pacific Ocean about 1,200 miles southeast of New Zealand after decaying from orbit.
Science
fromMail Online
3 days ago

Earthquakes rattle California city after weeks of silence

Seismic activity returned to San Ramon with two small tremors; no imminent major earthquake is indicated, but long-term Bay Area risk remains high.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 days ago

Unveiling a pioneer of early nanotechnology

Katharine Burr Blodgett developed surface-coating techniques that enabled nanotechnology decades before its time and worked within industrial research labs at General Electric.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 days ago

The Hubble Space Telescope is old, but it's far from busted

Hubble transformed astronomy by operating above Earth's atmosphere, enabling faint, ultraviolet observations and major discoveries; JWST does not replace Hubble.
fromwww.nature.com
4 days ago

Publisher Correction: Nanotyrannus and Tyrannosaurus coexisted at the close of the Cretaceous

Since the version of the article initially published, the copyright line has been amended to North Carolina Department of Natural and Cultural Resources and James Napoli, under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited in the HTML and PDF versions of the article.
Science
fromState of the Planet
3 days ago

Greenland Ice Cap Vanished Just 7,000 Years Ago

Prudhoe Dome in northwestern Greenland melted about 7,000 years ago, demonstrating high sensitivity of that ice to modest Holocene warming and potential future retreat.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 days ago

Winter's next wallop includes a bomb cyclone and Florida freezing

Intensely cold air is scouring the central and eastern U.S. again and will send temperatures plummeting all the way to the tip of Florida. Along with this new Arctic incursion, a major bomb cyclone storm is strengthening off the coast of the Carolinas, potentially bringing rare blizzard conditions to the region. Some areas haven't seen this amount of accumulating snow in over 30 years, wrote the National Weather Service's office in Wilmington, N.C., on Facebook.
Science
Science
fromMail Online
3 days ago

America's 'white gold' rush hits Arkansas with $2.3 trillion discovery

Direct Lithium Extraction can unlock 19 million tons of Arkansas lithium, potentially ending US dependence on China and creating a large domestic lithium supply.
Science
fromNews Center
1 week ago

New Underlying Mechanisms May Support Proper Transcriptional Regulation and Improve Targeted Therapies - News Center

BET proteins, particularly BRD4, regulate transcription initiation and elongation independently of bromodomains, with implications for targeted therapeutic development.
Science
fromwww.nature.com
4 days ago

Publisher Correction: A domed pachycephalosaur from the early Cretaceous of Mongolia

Copyright line amended to North Carolina Department of Natural and Cultural Resources with exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited in the HTML and PDF versions.
Science
fromHigh Country News
3 days ago

See the West's rich geologic past - High Country News

The Western United States' landscapes reflect deep geologic history spanning billions to millions of years, shaping present-day landforms, ecosystems, and resources.
fromState of the Planet
1 week ago

Sea Levels Are Rising-But in Greenland, They Will Fall

That seemingly paradoxical dynamic results from several factors. Foremost among them is the rebound of land beneath the Greenland Ice Sheet, a mile-thick body of glacial ice that covers 80 percent of the island and is being lost to melting at a rate of roughly 200 billion tons each year. As the ice sheet loses mass, the land beneath rises.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 days ago

For predatory dinosaurs, the Late Jurassic was an all-you-can-eat sauropod buffet

Sauropodshumongous reptiles with a long neck and tail and thick, elephantlike legsplayed a starring role in the dinosaur ecosystem, according to a new study. These massive dinosaurs are the largest creatures to ever walk on land. But they also played a crucial part in the food chain, the study authors write, acting as ecosystem engineers. The research was published on Friday in the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin.
Science
fromWIRED
1 week ago

No One Is Quite Sure Why Ice Is Slippery

The reason we can gracefully glide on an ice-skating rink or clumsily slip on an icy sidewalk is that the surface of ice is coated by a thin watery layer. Scientists generally agree that this lubricating, liquidlike layer is what makes ice slippery. They disagree, though, about why the layer forms. Three main theories about the phenomenon have been debated over the past two centuries. Last year, researchers in Germany put forward a fourth hypothesis that they say solves the puzzle.
Science
Science
fromenglish.elpais.com
3 days ago

More than half of your lifespan is shaped by genetics

Inherited genetic variation explains up to 55% of human lifespan variation after excluding deaths caused by extrinsic factors.
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