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fromwww.nature.com
14 hours ago

Author Correction: The first-principles phase diagram of monolayer nanoconfined water

Confinement pressures were underestimated; corrected confinement pressure equals Pconf = Psim * z/w, increasing reported pressures by ≈3× and shifting superionic onset to 10.512 GPa.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
42 minutes ago

Swirling Disk around a Distant Planet Could Be a Moon Factory

For the first time, scientists have directly detected molecules in a Frisbee of gas and dust swirling around an alien gas-giant planet. I didn't think this was possible, says astronomer Sierra Grant of Carnegie Science in Washington, D.C. Typically such a faint signal would be invisible in the glare of a star. Grant and her co-author Gabriele Cugno of the University of Zurich, who published the results recently in the Astrophysical Journal Letters, think the carbon-rich disk is a lunar nursery.
Science
fromwww.nature.com
14 hours ago

Author Correction: Videorate tunable colour electronic paper with human resolution

In the version of the article initially published, in Fig. 2a, the y axis of the middle panel was shifted upwards and has now been moved down so that 0 is level with the x axis. In Fig. 3a, the RGB pixels dashed red line has been shortened for clarity. In Extended Data Fig. 2, the y-axis label was W (100 to 200 nm) but should have been W (100 to 220 nm).
fromNature
14 hours ago

'Fire amoeba' survives in hotter conditions than any other complex cell

We need to rethink what's possible for a eukaryotic cell in a significant way.
Science
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fromFuturism
18 minutes ago

This Peek Under an Antarctic Base Is Absolutely Wild

Neumayer III uses hydraulic stilts to lift and realign the station weekly, preserving a permanent research presence on shifting Antarctic ice.
fromdesignboom | architecture & design magazine
2 hours ago

how a bird's ultrablack feathers inspired researchers to create the darkest fabric ever made

Researchers at Cornell University have developed a method that allows them to create the darkest fabric ever made, inspired by the ultrablack feathers of the magnificent riflebird. In the study, the group says that material can be used to improve solar thermal systems as well as camouflage clothing designed for thermal control. It is because the bird's feathers can absorb almost all light with their complex physical structure and the melanin inside them.
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fromMail Online
1 hour ago

Black got even blacker: Darkest fabric EVER blocks 99.87% of light

An ultra-black, wearable merino wool fabric absorbs 99.87% of light, produced by polydopamine dyeing and plasma-etched nanofibrils, offering scalable, patent-pending applications.
Science
fromMail Online
2 hours ago

Scientists find first 'evidence' of black holes born during Big Bang

Primordial black holes, potentially formed seconds after the Big Bang, may have been detected via a small-mass gravitational-wave signal by LIGO and Virgo.
Science
fromKqed
2 hours ago

Meteor Showers, Massive Moons and More: Winter Astronomy Events to Look Up for | KQED

December brings a near-perigee Cold Moon on Dec. 4, a dark-sky Geminids meteor shower peak Dec. 13–14, and the winter solstice on Dec. 21.
Science
fromFast Company
3 hours ago

Has NTT sparked the long-awaited quantum-computing revolution?

NTT pursues optical quantum computing using photons and IOWN-based error correction to reduce cooling, energy use, and improve scalability compared with cryogenic qubit systems.
Science
fromBusiness Insider
4 hours ago

I watched Bryan Johnson trip on mushrooms for 5 hours. I've lost my grip on reality.

A wealthy entrepreneur publicly combines high-dose psilocybin sessions with an extreme, costly anti-aging regimen while promoting a goal of arresting aging by 2039.
#dark-matter
Science
fromMail Online
3 hours ago

Ozone layer is healing! Hole over Antarctica is at smallest in 5 YEARS

The Antarctic ozone hole closed early in 2025, was the smallest in five years, and signals steady recovery with potential full recovery within decades.
Science
fromThe Mercury News
23 hours ago

SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carries satellite made by Sonoma State University students into orbit

A student-built CubeSat from Sonoma State, Howard, and UNH launched on SpaceX Transporter 15 to collect upper-atmosphere data in collaboration with NASA's IMAP mission.
Science
fromThe Mercury News
23 hours ago

UC Santa Cruz study shows developing brains have inherent structure

Developing brain tissue exhibits intrinsic electrical activity and preconfigured architecture that encodes information before any sensory experience, forming a primordial operating system.
Science
fromNature
1 day ago

AI finds signs of life in ancient rocks

Machine-learning algorithms trained on geological data can identify traces of ancient biological activity on Earth and other worlds.
Science
fromwww.santacruzsentinel.com
23 hours ago

UC Santa Cruz study shows developing brains have inherent structure

Developing brain tissue exhibits spontaneous, organized electrical activity and preconfigured firing sequences without sensory input, indicating innate neural structure for interpreting experience.
Science
fromTechCrunch
1 day ago

Varda says it has proven space manufacturing works -- now it wants to make it boring | TechCrunch

Space-manufactured pharmaceuticals and routine human orbital travel will become economically viable within two decades due to reusable launch and specialized small reentry capsules.
Science
fromSFGATE
16 hours ago

Marc Benioff joins wild hallucinogenic mushroom livestream

Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff joined a livestream where Bryan Johnson consumed psilocybin mushrooms and framed the experience in religious terms.
#quantum-computing
fromRealpython
23 hours ago
Science

Quantum Computing Basics With Qiskit - Real Python

Quantum computing uses quantum mechanics concepts like superposition, entanglement, and interference to process information differently than classical computers, enabling simultaneous exploration of possibilities.
from24/7 Wall St.
3 days ago
Science

What Alphabet's CEO Just Said Should Get Quantum Computing Investors Very Excited

Quantum computing shows palpable progress and could achieve real-world superiority within five years, while error-corrected, fully useful machines remain a decade or more away.
#spacex
#3iatlas
#baikonur-cosmodrome
Science
fromMail Online
19 hours ago

Species in Chernobyl disaster zone is mutating to feed on radiation

A melanin-containing black fungus converts gamma radiation into chemical energy and grows faster toward radiation, showing promise for radiation shielding and space applications.
Science
fromArs Technica
23 hours ago

Research roundup: 6 cool stories we almost missed

Forensic analyses confirm Duke Bela of Masco's remains and reconstruct a three-assailant assassination; other recent science finds explain woodpecker grunts and suggest social-media community notes can reduce misinformation.
Science
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

How a Daydream on a Bus Revolutionized Chemistry

19th-century advances in organic chemistry—Kekulé’s ideas about carbon bonding and structure—enabled synthesis of complex drugs like chlorpromazine.
Science
fromwww.nature.com
1 day ago

Editorial Expression of Concern: Cytokinesis failure generating tetraploids promotes tumorigenesis in p53-null cells

Image overlaps in figures and unavailable original raw data create uncertainty about the integrity of reported findings; interpret conclusions with caution.
Science
fromFast Company
1 day ago

How to tell your boss you're a night owl

Aligning work schedules with individual circadian chronotypes improves performance and motivation and reduces unfair penalties for night owls.
Science
fromTelecompetitor
16 hours ago

Global commercial broadband satellite sector to reach new heights: Report

Global commercial broadband satellite market will more than double to about $29.8 billion by 2033, driven by LEO deployment, 5G integration, and rising industry adoption.
Science
fromNature
1 day ago

Climbing through the silver mine: my work as a geologist

Asgat is a remote, high-altitude Mongolian silver deposit estimated to contain about 2,200 tonnes of silver, potentially one of the world's richest deposits.
Science
fromNature
1 day ago

Nature at its weirdest: what metamorphosis reveals about science and ourselves

Metamorphosis reveals how dramatic post-birth body-plan changes illuminate genetic inheritance, development, and evolution through historical scientific case studies.
Science
fromNature
1 day ago

Spineless creatures, possibly the world's oldest beer receipt and more: 2025's best Books in brief

Marine invertebrates display extraordinary diversity and adaptive transformations while facing climate-driven threats, and animal sex can involve rapid, flexible changes in reproductive roles.
fromNews Center
22 hours ago

Mechanisms of Antibody Production May Help Improve Vaccines - News Center

Scientists led by Stephanie Eisenbarth, MD, PhD, the Roy and Elaine Patterson Professor of Medicine and director of the Center for Human Immunobiology, have discovered how critical IgA antibodies are produced through unexpected cellular pathways, findings that may help inform the design of more effective vaccines to prevent infections, according to a recent study published in Immunity. Immunoglobulin (Ig)A is an antibody that serves as the first line of defense for mucosal tissues that comprise the inner lining of organs in the respiratory system and digestive
Science
Science
fromNature
1 day ago

David Baltimore obituary: virologist whose enzyme discovery transformed understanding of cancer and HIV/AIDS

David Baltimore discovered reverse transcriptase, revealing retroviruses make DNA from RNA and enabling major advances in molecular biology and RNA analysis.
Science
fromState of the Planet
21 hours ago

Will Glacier Melt Lead to Increased Seismic Activity in Mountain Regions?

Climate-driven glacial melt can increase rock pore pressures and alter stress regimes, potentially triggering earthquakes in seismically active mountain massifs.
#physics-outreach
fromwww.mercurynews.com
1 day ago
Science

Foothill College show makes for fascinating physics

Foothill College instructors will perform The Physics Show with dramatic demonstrations to engage students; $6 tickets fund performances for Title I schools and outreach.
fromThe Mercury News
1 day ago
Science

Foothill College show makes for fascinating physics

Foothill College will stage The Physics Show—live physics demonstrations on specific December and January dates—to engage students and fund outreach to Title I schools.
fromwww.mercurynews.com
2 days ago

Trump administration science assault slams major Bay Area economic engine, threatens amazing innovations'

Trump in an August executive order said federal grants had been insufficiently vetted, and some propagated absurd ideologies. Hastings, whose South San Francisco firm Nkarta engineers killer cells to fight disease, said biotechnology companies across the board are cutting staff and product-development projects as uncertainty over what comes next rattles investors.
Science
Science
fromThe Mercury News
2 days ago

Trump administration science assault slams major Bay Area economic engine, threatens 'amazing innovations'

Trump administration scrutiny and cuts to federal research funding are triggering Bay Area biotech layoffs, project cancellations, and investor uncertainty.
Science
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

The Five Core Values that Direct Your Life

Five evidence-based value dimensions explain differences in goals, priorities, and motivations and can guide decisions to improve long-term well-being.
Science
fromScienceDaily
1 day ago

Scientists find a hidden obesity trigger in soybean oil

Soybean oil produces oxylipins that alter liver metabolism and fat processing, causing obesity in mice; genetic differences in HNF4α can prevent weight gain.
Science
fromThe Verge
3 days ago

Why Honda is suddenly launching reusable rockets

Honda launched and landed a 20-foot reusable rocket, extending its transportation expertise into space and pursuing reusable launch vehicle development under a dedicated space strategy.
Science
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

The Science of Brain Maps and Cognitive Amplification

Brain processing reallocates neurological resources to highly active regions, enabling rewiring of brain maps that enhances skills, knowledge potential, critical thinking, and cognitive amplification.
Science
fromwww.nature.com
2 days ago

Could Symbolic AI Unlock Human-like Intelligence?

Combining neural networks with symbolic AI (neurosymbolic AI) is viewed as necessary to reach human-level intelligence.
Science
fromFast Company
3 days ago

How SailGP turned the niche sport into a $200 million celebrity investment magnet

Celebrities are investing in SailGP because the league transformed high-speed foiling catamarans into a commercially attractive, spectator-friendly motorsport-style competition.
Science
fromMail Online
3 days ago

What would really happen if our sun dimmed like in Project Hail Mary

A small sustained dimming of the Sun (about 1% per year, 5% over 20 years) would cool Earth rapidly and could collapse human civilization.
Science
fromLos Angeles Times
3 days ago

Magnitude 3.2 earthquake shakes San Francisco Bay Area

Multiple earthquakes struck California this week, including a magnitude 3.2 near Pacifica and a 3.4 near Monterey Bay, felt across Bay Area and Riverside regions.
Science
fromNature
4 days ago

Audio long read: Faulty mitochondria cause deadly diseases - fixing them is about to get a lot easier

Please provide the full article text or authorize retrieval via the DOI so I can produce an accurate, quote‑based analysis.
fromBusiness Insider
4 days ago

14-year-old won $25,000 and 1st place for his innovative work on origami

I've been folding origami as a hobby for more than six years, mostly of animals or insects.
Science
fromBig Think
4 days ago

Ask Ethan: What's the point of exploring the Universe?

There are some major problems facing humanity in the 21st century, and they're all going to require an enormous investment of our collective resources if we want to solve them. From climate change to global pandemics to the energy and water crises and more, none of these problems are going to solve themselves. If they're to be solved at all, it's going to come down to humanity's collective actions.
Science
fromwww.bbc.com
4 days ago

Will boats be a breakthrough for 3D printing tech?

After two years of experimentation, the material was finally right: a particular mix of thermoplastics and fibreglass that is strong, has no need of extra coating to protect it from sunlight, and is resistant to fouling and marine growth. The perfect base, says Mr Logtenberg, from which to 3D print a boat. Boats need to withstand the unforgiving nature of the marine environment.
Science
fromwww.nature.com
4 days ago

Author Correction: Evidence for improved DNA repair in the long-lived bowhead whale

Full text for the reported correction and underlying study was not provided. Exact, verbatim quotes cannot be extracted without the article body or correction text. Please supply the article PDF, DOI, or the corrected text so that two to four precise extractable quotes (each ~60–85 words) can be returned verbatim from the source.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 days ago

NASA Recruits Mars Perseverance Rover to Monitor Sun's Activity

NASA has drafted its Mars rover Perseverance to help monitor the sun's activity. Every day for the next two months, the rover will image the sun with its Mastcam-Z cameras, capturing crucial information about sunspots and other large features that can give clues to solar activity. Mars is currently passing behind the sun, giving the rover a view of the star's far sidea perspective we can't see from Earth.
Science
fromMail Online
3 days ago

Airbus issues emergency warning for 6,000 passenger jets

The aeronautics company announced Friday that they have discovered a potential vulnerability in the software on board the Airbus A320 during solar storms, which may hinder pilots from steering or stabilizing the plane while in the air. Airbus issued an Alert Operators Transmission (AOT), a global warning that urges all airlines using the A320 passenger jet to immediately update their software and hardware to better protect against radiation interference.
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Science
fromBusiness Insider
4 days ago

Russia's only way to send astronauts to space just suffered serious blast damage

Russia's only crewed launchpad at Baikonur was severely damaged during a Soyuz liftoff, dislodging its service bay, though the crew was unharmed.
#soyuz
Science
fromenglish.elpais.com
3 days ago

The fall of a prolific science journal exposes the billion-dollar profits of scientific publishing

A high-volume, pay-to-publish mega-journal compromised scientific quality, enabling irregular studies while generating large profits for major publisher Elsevier.
fromBusiness Insider
3 days ago

Human brain ages at four major turning points: 9, 32, 66, 83

Scientists at the University of Cambridge's cognition and brain sciences unit have used images of roughly 3,800 "neurotypical" brains, ranging in age from birth to 90, to pinpoint these turning points where our brains change shape to serve different functions as we grow, age, and eventually decline. Roughly speaking, ages nine, 32, 66, and 83 mark pivotal shifts in how our brains operate. "This study is the first to identify major phases of brain wiring across a human lifespan," Dr. Alexa Mousley, who led the research, said in a release.
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fromBusiness Insider
3 days ago

A Cold War nuclear bunker is buried deep inside a Colorado mountain. See inside the Cheyenne Mountain Complex.

Cheyenne Mountain is a hardened underground NORAD backup facility that can seal itself, withstand large nuclear blasts, and support NORAD and USNORTHCOM operations.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
4 days ago

To See a Star's Face, You Have to Interfere with It

The only major difference between the sun and the stars we see at night is that the sun happens to be close to uswhich is advantageous, assuming you enjoy being alive. Astronomers enjoy this as well but have another reason for rejoicing in the sun's proximity: this allows us to see it as a disk. The sun is, of course, three-dimensional.
Science
Science
fromTheregister
4 days ago

GPUs aren't worth their weight in gold

Supercomputing remains focused on high-precision FP64 workloads, driving specialized architectures, large-scale industry participation, and persistent trade-offs between performance and application changes.
Science
fromMail Online
4 days ago

Mystery of the Temple of Venus is SOLVED after 2,000 years

Roman builders used volcanic materials in Temple of Venus construction, producing geomaterials that consolidate and remain durable for nearly 2,000 years despite ground subsidence.
fromWIRED
4 days ago

How to Measure the Earth's Radius With Legos

More than 2,000 years ago, pretty much every educated human knew the Earth was round. There are some pretty obvious clues, after all. If you travel south, you see stars and constellations you've never seen before (because they're blocked by Earth's curvature). When a ship comes into port, you see the top of it before the bottom (because the ocean surface is curved). Finally, when Earth's shadow falls on the moon in a lunar eclipse, the shadow is a circle. I mean, c'mon!
Science
fromMail Online
3 days ago

Earthquakes strike California for THIRD DAY sparking 'Big One' fears

Three minor earthquakes were detected less than 30 miles south of San Jose Friday morning, striking within three minutes of each other between 10.40 and 10.43am ET. The US Geological Survey (USGS) reported that the first tremor registered as a magnitude 3.4 earthquake, and was then followed moments later by magnitude 2.6 and 2.5 quakes. No injuries or damage to local property has been reported at this time.
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fromMail Online
4 days ago

French fry facial? Scientists are turning potato into 'skincare gold'

Potato plant waste contains solanesol and vitamin K2 that can be used in cosmetics to support collagen, antioxidant protection, and replace tobacco-derived ingredients.
Science
fromArs Technica
4 days ago

Reintroduced carnivores' impacts on ecosystems are still coming into focus

Human hunting and management, more than large carnivores, primarily drive elk, moose, and deer population changes across most mainland systems.
#fever
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

City life is reshaping raccoons and may be nudging them toward domestication

Urban raccoons in the US are showing shortened snouts and other early domestication-like physical changes, likely driven by proximity to humans and access to trash.
Science
fromMail Online
3 days ago

'Worrying' virus resistant to body's defense system, study shows

Bird flu viruses tolerate higher, bird-body temperatures that often exceed human fever ranges, enabling continued replication and severe disease despite human fever responses.
Science
fromComputerWeekly.com
4 days ago

UK partnership extends fibre optic tech for more reliable radio comms | Computer Weekly

Aston University and Pulse Power & Measurement will develop a radio-over-fibre prototype to amplify and extend radio signals over fibre optics for ultra-stable, long-distance communications.
fromBig Think
5 days ago

What we can learn from butterflies

Ever since I first read Janine Benyus's Biomimicry: Innovation Inspired by Nature, I've descended into a rabbit hole in search of what " intelligence " really means (and who has it). Perhaps that's why I love the name of this newsletter so much. [It's a worm, after all. A humble, indispensable critter buried beneath the soil.] Benyus's central argument is that the "smartest" solutions to human problems already exist in nature. We just need to know where, and how, to look for them. (For instance: wind turbines inspired by humpback whales.)
Science
Science
fromSustainable Bus
4 days ago

Inside Cummins' multi-energy strategy for the bus market: from LFP batteries to Euro VII, gas and hydrogen engines - Sustainable Bus

Cummins advances parallel decarbonisation pathways by developing LFP battery packs and continuing investment in advanced combustion, hydrogen, and natural gas technologies.
Science
fromTESLARATI
4 days ago

Blue Origin announces Super-Heavy New Glenn 9x4 to Rival SpaceX Starship

Blue Origin is developing the New Glenn 9×4 super-heavy rocket to carry 70 metric tons to LEO with uprated BE-4/BE-3U engines and increased reusability.
fromTheregister
4 days ago

Rosalind Franklin rover catches a break as NASA stays in

The European Space Agency's long-delayed Rosalind Franklin rover has received a boost with confirmation that NASA is staying in the project. During Director General Josef Achbacher's speech at the agency's Ministerial meeting, where funding is debated and projects proposed and selected, he said [PDF]: "Just yesterday, I received very good news from NASA to confirm their contribution to the Rosalind Franklin Mission."
Science
fromNature
5 days ago

A structured system: the secrets of Germany's scientific reputation

In 2019, shortly after finishing her master's at Nanjing University in China, Xinyi Zhao opened an e-mail to learn that she had been offered a PhD position at the Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research in Rostock, Germany. "When I told my parents, they asked me to double-check whether the offer was real, as they weren't familiar with the institute." But Zhao knew of its glowing scientific reputation.
Science
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fromMail Online
4 days ago

Earthquake swarm rattles California on Thanksgiving

Multiple small earthquakes occurred near The Geysers geothermal field, where geothermal operations and local faults contribute to frequent, sometimes induced, seismicity.
Science
fromwww.npr.org
5 days ago

NASA astronauts celebrate Thanksgiving with Russian cranberry sauce

International Space Station crew will celebrate Thanksgiving with a special group meal of space-safe festive foods shared among multinational astronauts and arriving crew.
Science
fromScienceDaily
5 days ago

Your body may already have a molecule that helps fight Alzheimer's

Spermine induces misfolded amyloid proteins to clump into harmless aggregates, offering a potential therapeutic approach for Alzheimer's and Parkinson's.
fromMail Online
5 days ago

Scientists come up with method to stop the Gulf Stream collapsing

Melting the West Antarctic Ice Sheet could save the Gulf Stream, a remarkable new study reveals. The vast icy mass in the southern hemisphere contains around 750,000 cubic miles of ice - enough to fill Wembley Stadium nearly three billion times. As it melts, the West Antarctic Ice Sheet sends salty water towards the North Atlantic, which helps the water stay dense enough to keep the crucial ocean current moving, the study authors reveal.
Science
Science
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

The Biology of Gratitude

Gratitude triggers neurochemical responses that reduce stress, elevate mood, enhance empathy and brain plasticity, and communal rituals amplify these biological benefits.
fromMail Online
4 days ago

Just one session of weight training boosts brain power, study finds

In the study, they tracked 121 adults aged between 18 and 50 and split them into two groups. All underwent cardiovascular fitness tests and were quizzed about their lifestyle. Two days later, all participants then gave blood samples and had an electroencephalographic (EEG) scan to record the electrical activity of the brain. The first group then did sets of weight exercises of moderate difficulty, while the other was asked to watch a video of adults performing resistance exercises. The resistance exercises lasted for 42 minutes.
Science
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fromFuncheap
4 days ago

Free King Tides Walk + Science Talk (Palo Alto)

Free, interactive King Tides learning walk at Palo Alto Baylands with a hands-on science talk; highest tide at 12:24pm; register on EventBrite due to limited space.
Science
fromwww.dw.com
5 days ago

Germany news: ESA plan for German astronaut to head to moon DW 11/27/2025

The European Space Agency aims to include a German astronaut in an Artemis moon mission, while a German-Turkish family in Istanbul died from insecticide poisoning.
fromSFGATE
4 days ago

Magnitude 3.7 earthquake rattles Northern California early Thanksgiving morning

An earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of 3.7 rattled roughly 37 miles north of Santa Rosa in Northern California on Thursday morning, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.
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fromMail Online
4 days ago

Scientists baffled as halo of red light appears over Italian town

A rare red halo over Possagno, likely an ELVE caused by lightning-driven electromagnetic pulses, was photographed twice in three years.
fromSustainable Bus
5 days ago

Kiira Motors electric coach completes first 1,700 km of a 13,000-km trans-African journey - Sustainable Bus

Kiira Motors Corporation has concluded a 1,771-kilometre electric coach run across Tanzania along its journey on the Made in Uganda Grand Trans-Africa Electric Expedition, which is offering the company a detailed set of observations on long-distance electric coach operation in East African conditions. The company was founded a few years ago and is owned by the State of Uganda. It focuses on the development of zero emission vehicles.
Science
Science
fromABC7 Los Angeles
4 days ago

Scientists capture the crackling sounds of what they believe is lightning on Mars

Perseverance's microphone recorded 55 short electrical discharges ('mini lightning') on Mars during dust storms and dust devils over two Martian years.
fromMail Online
4 days ago

Inside the mating rituals of turkeys- from wingmen to sexy snoods

Most Americans think of turkeys in November, but for wild turkeys, the real drama unfolds in spring, when breeding season transforms forests and fields into complex social arenas filled with high-stakes courtship. During this time, male turkeys, or toms, display a striking combination of physical traits and behaviors to attract females, including gobbling calls, fanned tails, sharp spurs, hair-like beards on their chests, and the elongated snood draping over their beak, which research shows is a key factor in female choice.
Science
fromTasting Table
4 days ago

Having Nightmares? What Foods You Eat Before Sleeping Might Be The Culprit - Tasting Table

A 2025 study, published in Frontiers in Psychology, surveyed more than a thousand college students to find out how they thought food affects their sleep and dreams. About 40% said certain foods make their sleep better or worse. Only 5.5% said food changes their dreams, which suggests there is not one surefire, nightmare-inducing snack, so much as sensitive people whose guts and sleep are tightly linked.
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

Florida professor may have solved mystery of Peru's Band of Holes

A Florida archaeologist's decades-long persistence has helped solve one of Peru's most puzzling geographical conundrums: the origin and purpose of the so-called Band of Holes in the country's mountainous Pisco Valley. Charles Stanish, professor of archaeology at the University of South Florida, and an expert on Andean culture, spent years studying the more than 5,200 curious hillside shallow pits known to local residents as Monte Sierpe - serpent mountain.
Science
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fromTheregister
6 days ago

India satisfies its supercomputing needs, not its ambitions

India's National Supercomputing Mission has built substantial compute capacity and local indigenization but still lacks domestic semiconductor leadership and a completed homegrown CPU.
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