Science

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#motivation-brake
fromNature
1 day ago
Science

Daily briefing: The neural circuit that can make it hard to start a difficult task

A neural 'motivation brake' reduces willingness to begin unpleasant tasks; suppressing it in macaques increased initiation, suggesting potential implications for treating motivation deficits in depression.
fromNature
4 days ago
Science

Can't get motivated? This brain circuit might explain why - and it can be turned off

A neural pathway functions as a 'motivation brake' that suppresses task initiation; suppressing it restores goal-directed behavior in macaques.
fromNature
1 day ago
Science

Daily briefing: The neural circuit that can make it hard to start a difficult task

fromNature
4 days ago
Science

Can't get motivated? This brain circuit might explain why - and it can be turned off

Science
fromPsychology Today
2 hours ago

What Can Gaming Do for Our Intelligence?

Effective intelligence — attention, working memory, decision-making, and learning speed — is trainable through experience and interventions such as gaming, leveraging neuroplasticity.
Science
fromenglish.elpais.com
4 hours ago

US begins countdown to return to the Moon amid doubts over the risks faced by its astronauts

NASA prepares Artemis II crewed lunar test mission amid an ISS evacuation and mounting safety concerns about the Orion capsule's reentry heat shield.
fromBig Think
10 hours ago

The four paths forward for US scientists in 2026

For nearly 100 years, the United States has been the world's leader in a wide variety of scientific fields. No other country has: invested as much in fundamental scientific research, has made more scientific breakthroughs and scientific advances, has attracted more scientific researchers to move there to conduct their research, or has conducted more projects and been home to more scientists that have won Nobel Prizes.
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fromDefector
2 hours ago

Convening The TrueHoop Ideas Summit, With Henry Abbott | Defector

Frontiers of human-body science, NBA injury causes, detailed calf anatomy, electromagnetic radiation as a possible factor, and a high-school court pillar used for setting picks.
from24/7 Wall St.
4 hours ago

Up 96% in Just 1 Month, Is Planet Labs Now Too Pricey to Buy?

Planet Labs ( ) has been on a tear, soaring 388% in 2025 and up another 96% since reporting earnings one month ago. The stock is up an incredible 811% from its 52-week low of $2.79 per share. While it has been winning significant government contracts, such as yesterday's announcement that it won a nine-figure contract from the Swedish government, which drove the stock 12% higher, PL is unprofitable and likely won't be for some time.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 hours ago

Vertical Solar PanelsWind-Resistant Trackers for High Latitudes

A startup is developing wind-adaptive, vertical-tracking solar panels to improve energy capture at low sun angles in higher latitudes but prototypes have suffered structural failures.
fromNature
17 hours ago

AlphaFold can help African researchers to do cutting-edge structural biology

Structural biology is essential for understanding diseases and for developing drugs and vaccines. Africa has few specialists in this field, owing to limited infrastructure, training and mentorship opportunities - despite the efforts of non-profit organizations such as BioStruct-Africa, which I co-founded. doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/d41586-026-00072-3Competing Interests E.N. received a 2024 Google Award for a socially impactful project enabled by AlphaFold and Google DeepMind sponsorship in 2025 to support the BioStruct-Africa structural-biology training event (series 6). E.N. is also supported by a Wellcome Trust award (grant number 222999/Z/21/Z).
Science
frominsideevs.com
12 hours ago

High-Power Fast Charging Is The Leading Cause Of EV Battery Degradation: Report

Batteries in electric vehicles that regularly use 100-plus-kilowatts fast chargers degrade faster than those that rely primarily on slow charging, a new study suggests. Using fast chargers more frequently can cause some packs to lose nearly a quarter of their capacity in eight years, it claims. We've seen other studies suggest that fast charging has little impact on long-term battery health, so it's not a settled debate.
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Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 hours ago

A bombshell': doubt cast on discovery of microplastics throughout human body

High-profile findings of microplastics in human tissues likely reflect contamination and methodological limitations, leaving health impacts uncertain.
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
12 hours ago

He invented mini saunas for frogs now this biologist has big plans to save hundreds of species

Conservation biologist Anthony Waddle uses innovative frog saunas to protect frogs from the deadly chytrid fungus threatening global amphibian populations.
Science
fromIndependent
12 hours ago

Cheers, banners and pride for Kerry's Young Scientist winner, Aoibheann, as she returns to school

Aoibheann Daly, a 15-year-old Transition Year student, won the 2026 Stripe YSTE top prize for GlioScope, aimed at improving brain cancer treatment.
Science
fromFlowingData
6 hours ago

Your interpretation of uncertainty language compared

Verbal probability expressions can be mapped to percentage values between 0% (impossible) and 100% (definite) to quantify uncertainty.
Science
fromColossal
1 hour ago

'Making the Invisible Visible' Highlights an Ambitious Digitization Project at Harvard

Digitizing museum analog catalogs and microscope-slide invertebrate collections preserves fragile records and makes thousands of specimens accessible to researchers and the public.
Science
fromNature
17 hours ago

Don't assume that women's low retraction rates reflect male 'boldness'

Attributing fewer retractions in women-led research to male scrutiny, bolder ideas, or larger teams implies male scientists are inherently better.
fromNature
17 hours ago

Should the Loch Ness Monster have a scientific name?

A debate over a potential newly discovered species, and a tip for buying good sherry in this week's pick from the Nature archive.
Science
fromScienceDaily
10 hours ago

This new sugar tastes like the real thing without the usual downsides

Scientists at Tufts have found a way to turn common glucose into a rare sugar that tastes almost exactly like table sugar-but with far fewer downsides. Using engineered bacteria as microscopic factories, the team can now produce tagatose efficiently and cheaply, achieving yields far higher than current methods. Tagatose delivers nearly the same sweetness as sugar with significantly fewer calories, minimal impact on blood sugar, and even potential benefits for oral and gut health.
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Science
fromwww.bbc.com
15 hours ago

I spent months investigating whether gut health affects ageing - and if I could hack my own gut to age better

Gut microbiome may influence ageing, affecting lifespan and physical strength, though evidence remains incomplete and requires further research.
Science
fromNature
17 hours ago

How did birds evolve? The answer is wilder than anyone thought

Jurassic birds included diverse forms like Archaeopteryx and newly discovered Baminornis, revealing complex early avian evolution and questions about origins of powered flight.
fromLGBTQ Nation
4 hours ago

Study finds widespread same-sex behavior among primates & could help explain why nature is so gay - LGBTQ Nation

The study's authors researched 96 peer-reviewed studies documenting SSB to compile one of the most comprehensive datasets for primates to date. The study found that SSB are a "persistent and integral component of primate social [practices]." In fact, the prevalence of SSB across a variety of closely related primate species - and over several lines of descendants - "indicates a deep evolutionary root or multiple independent evolutionary origins," the study's authors wrote.
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fromNature
4 days ago

Daily briefing: Fusion reactor pushes plasma past crucial limit

Multiple science developments: EAST tokamak surpassed the Greenwald density limit; ISS crew evacuated; AI chatbots produced therapy-like trauma narratives; cellular atlas finds population immune differences.
Science
fromFast Company
23 hours ago

Scientific breakthroughs are redefining what's possible with asteroids, cancer research, and neurotech

Cross-disciplinary collaborations and AI enable breakthroughs—asteroid deflection, immunotherapy mapping, and vestibular control—advancing capability to protect and improve human life.
Science
fromBig Think
1 day ago

How to be as innovative as the Wright brothers - no computers required

Confusing low probability with impossibility causes dismissal of feasible innovations, as shown by Lord Kelvin's incorrect declaration that heavier-than-air flight was impossible.
fromNature
1 day ago

'We're humans - brilliant and a mess': Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales on trust and optimism

The online encyclopedia now holds more than seven million articles and has become a standard guide for anyone seeking information. The Wikimedia Foundation, a non-profit organization in San Francisco, California, runs the project with about 700 employees, but Wikipedia still relies entirely on unpaid volunteers to write and edit its articles: hundreds of thousands of people contribute to the site each month, under a set of community-developed rules to deal with disagreements, cut down self-promotion and generate consensus.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Flu Season Worsens, AI Models Predict Illness from Sleep, and Woodpeckers Reveal Nature's Secrets

In the U.S., more than 8 percent of all visits to a health care provider in the week that ended December 27 were for respiratory illness, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. That's the highest rate the agency has recorded since it began keeping track in 1997. According to the CDC, so far this season the flu has contributed to an estimated 120,000 hospitalizations and 5,000 deaths, including nine children.
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#nasa
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fromTheregister
1 day ago

Ill astronaut prompts Crew-11 to return to Earth

Crew-11 will return to Earth early due to a medical issue; command transferred to Sergey Kud-Sverchkov and the affected astronaut is stable.
Science
fromArs Technica
22 hours ago

NASA launches new mission to get the most out of the James Webb Space Telescope

Pandora will supplement Webb by validating exoplanet atmospheric observations using a low-cost, small satellite to improve confidence in habitable-world detections.
#international-space-station
fromFuturism
1 day ago

Astronomers Intrigued By Impossible Structure Around Dead Star

A dead star 730 light years away appears to be forming a powerful structure around itself - and despite their best efforts, astronomers aren't sure how. The cosmic corpse, designated RXJ0528+2838, is an incredibly dense stellar remnant known as a white dwarf, with a Sun-like star orbiting around it. This binary arrangement isn't uncommon throughout the universe, but what is strange is the structure surrounding the former body: a highly energetic and luminescent cloud known as a nebula,
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fromBig Think
1 day ago

NASA watched this supernova blast expand for 25 years

Kepler's supernova remnant shows asymmetric expansion observed by Chandra over 25 years, with shockwave speeds ranging from 1,800 to 6,200 km/s.
Science
fromFuturism
23 hours ago

Asteroid Behaving Strangely

A 2,300-foot Main Belt asteroid, 2025 MN 45, rotates every 1 minute 53 seconds, implying unusually high internal strength rather than a rubble pile.
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 day ago

From Borges to Jennifer Aniston: Science begins to illuminate the mysteries of memory

Funes could learn languages and recite books from memory. Recalling a single day took him an entire day, as every detail accumulated itself in his mind in its most meticulous insignificance. The poor wretch saw this as a gift, but as his story unfolds, it reveals itself more as a curse, for remembering in such detail prevented him from distinguishing the essential from the superfluous.
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#spacex
Science
fromNature
1 day ago

US scientists push back as Trump eyes Greenland

US-based scientists declared solidarity with Greenland after US presidential comments, emphasizing the island's critical role in climate research and global sea-level impacts.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
22 hours ago

Far-Out Exoplanet Breaks a Cardinal Rule of Astronomy

TOI-1873 hosts three Neptune-sized planets with anomalous spacing: the third planet's observed transits are separated by 900 days instead of the expected ~90 days.
Science
fromComputerWeekly.com
1 day ago

Eutelsat extends Airbus contract for further low Earth orbit OneWeb satellites | Computer Weekly

Airbus Defence and Space will build 340 LEO satellites for Eutelsat to maintain operational continuity of the OneWeb constellation.
Science
fromNature
1 day ago

Ancient 'snowball' Earth had frigidly briny seas

Snowball Earth oceans were extremely cold (around −15 °C) and so highly saline that seawater remained liquid at subfreezing temperatures.
#same-sex-behavior
#same-sex-behaviour
fromNature
1 day ago
Science

Same-sex sexual behaviour can help primates to survive - and reproduce

fromNature
1 day ago
Science

Same-sex sexual behaviour can help primates to survive - and reproduce

Science
fromPsychology Today
18 hours ago

The Birth Order Hoax

Birth order has negligible impact on personality; genetic factors and peer influences primarily shape personality while perceived sibling differences stem from environment and family narratives.
Science
fromArs Technica
2 days ago

The oceans just keep getting hotter

In 2025 the world's oceans absorbed a record 23 zettajoules of heat, the highest since the 1960s.
fromBig Think
1 day ago

Starts With A Bang podcast #125 - Large-scale structure

We don't merely have the Hubble tension to reckon with, or the fact that different methods yield different values for the expansion rate of the Universe today, but a puzzle over whether dark energy is truly a constant in our Universe, as most physicists have assumed since its discovery back in 1998. While "early relic" methods using CMB or baryon acoustic oscillation data favor a lower value of around 67 km/s/Mpc, "distance ladder" methods instead prefer a higher, incompatible value of around 73 km/s/Mpc.
Science
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

Lots of people don't want to do it': Paul Nurse on his controversial second term as Royal Society president

Paul Nurse, a Nobel-winning geneticist, has been reappointed president of the Royal Society amid debate over representation and the academy's traditions.
Science
fromArs Technica
1 day ago

That time Will Smith helped discover new species of anaconda

A new species of giant anaconda, the northern green anaconda (Eunectes akayama), was identified in northern South America through genetic analysis.
Science
fromTheregister
3 days ago

Artificial brains could point way to ultra-efficient supers

Neuromorphic computers can efficiently solve complex partial differential equations while consuming very low power, enabling potential ultra-efficient supercomputing.
Science
fromFuturism
3 days ago

China Builds Wild Gravity Machine

CHIEF1900 is a centrifuge that generates up to 1,900 times Earth's gravity to study extreme-force effects on materials, structures, plants, and cells.
Science
fromEngadget
3 days ago

NASA makes final preparations for its first crewed moon mission in over 50 years

Artemis 2 aims to launch in February 2026, carrying four astronauts on a 10-day lunar flyby to test Orion life support systems.
Science
fromTechCrunch
2 days ago

SpaceX gets FCC approval to launch 7,500 more Starlink satellites | TechCrunch

The FCC approved SpaceX to launch 7,500 additional Gen2 Starlink satellites (total 15,000), enabling multi-frequency operation and direct-to-cell service outside the U.S., with launch deadlines.
fromIndependent
3 days ago

Luke O'Neill: Here are the four ages when your brain wiring alters

Shakespeare wrote in his play As You Like It that we humans go through seven ages. The first is the "infant mewling and puking"; next "the whining schoolboy"; then "the lover sighing like a furnace", followed by the soldier "full of strange oaths, seeking the bubble reputation"; then "the justice in fair round belly"; the sixth age is "with spectacles on nose"; and finally there's "second childishness".
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Science
fromFuturism
3 days ago

Scientists Weirded Out by Cosmic Bones in Distant Space

Cloud-9 is a starless, gas-rich, dark-matter-dominated object representing a primordial, failed galaxy fragment and offering a probe into dark matter.
fromTravel + Leisure
3 days ago

13 of the Darkest Places in the U.S. for Incredible Stargazing

Your stargazing experience can differ greatly based on where you are in the world. That's due in part to light pollution, which can drown out all but the brightest stars and satellites in densely populated areas. For truly unforgettable celestial views, you'll need to visit one of the darkest places in the U.S. on a clear night. DarkSky is an Arizona-based nonprofit with the mission "to restore the nighttime environment and protect communities and wildlife from light pollution."
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fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

Why Sensory Overload Isn't About "Too Much"

The brain exerts extra effort interpreting unclear sensory information; predictability reduces sensory strain, and autism and ADHD often involve prolonged higher effort.
Science
fromThe Verge
2 days ago

The FCC is letting SpaceX launch 7,500 more Starlink satellites

The FCC approved 7,500 additional Gen2 Starlink satellites, bringing SpaceX's authorized total to about 15,000 and waiving overlapping-coverage restrictions.
Science
fromwww.dw.com
2 days ago

US research shows what ADHD drugs really do and don't do DW 01/10/2026

ADHD stimulant medications primarily stimulate the brain's reward and wakefulness centers rather than directly enhancing attention circuitry, explaining improved motivation and reduced task effort.
Science
fromNature
4 days ago

Chinese nuclear fusion reactor pushes plasma past crucial limit: what happens next

China's EAST tokamak exceeded the Greenwald density limit, achieving plasma densities 30–65% above previous norms, advancing tokamak fusion performance.
Science
fromWIRED
3 days ago

Meta Is Making a Big Bet on Nuclear With Oklo

Meta is purchasing fuel for an Oklo nuclear plant, marking a rare hyperscaler purchase to support small modular reactor deployment and U.S. nuclear innovation.
Science
fromNature
5 days ago

Daily briefing: Octopus-inspired synthetic 'skin' changes appearance on demand

A synthetic polymer skin can reversibly change color and texture on demand, while ancient hunter-gatherers used plant-derived poisons on arrowheads 60,000 years ago.
fromNature
4 days ago

To infinity and beyond Earth's pale blue dot: Books in brief

This spectacular book of photographs of the Universe is dedicated to the late astronomer and broadcaster Patrick Moore, who introduced the authors to one another. Astrophysicist Derek Ward-Thompson, rock guitarist Brian May - who also holds a PhD in astrophysics - and astrophotographer J.-P. Metsävainio showcase some of the "billions of vast glowing islands in the immensity of what seems like infinite space and time". Several of the photos appear in adjacent pairs, visible in 3D with a stereo-focusing viewer.
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fromFast Company
4 days ago

These molecules are remaking manufacturing

Advances in catalysts and enzymes are transforming plant-based processing into precise, energy-efficient, foundational infrastructure for lower-carbon manufacturing.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
4 days ago

Ocean Temperatures Just Hit a Dire New Record

The world's oceans stored more heat in 2025 than any previous year, accelerating sea-level rise, ecosystem disruption, and extreme weather risks.
#crew-11
fromHigh Country News
4 days ago

Meet the oldest rock in the West - High Country News

For many of us humans, old trees - gnarled oaks or towering redwoods - are sources of psychological comfort. As elders who have weathered earlier times of crisis, they signify continuity and resilience. Their rings bridge present and past and remind us that our "now" is only one of many. But for longer-distance time travel, we must seek out even more ancient ancestors. The ones with the longest memories, full of insights germane to our Anthropocene anxieties, are right here in our midst:
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fromNature
4 days ago

Disappearing 'planet' reveals a solar system's turbulent times

Debris from two catastrophic collisions in the Fomalhaut system, not a planet, explains observed features and informs planet formation.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 days ago

Why Your Brain Puts Off Doing Unpleasant Tasks

A ventral striatum–ventral pallidum circuit in macaque brains acts as a motivation brake, and suppressing it reduces hesitation for unpleasant tasks.
fromFortune
3 days ago

New study finds that late bloomers are more successful than child prodigies | Fortune

You may have a leg up on the child prodigies who made you feel inadequate as a school kid. Despite outliers like Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, a new analysis based on 19 studies involving 34,000 high achievers across multiple disciplines - including Nobel laureates, top chess players, Olympic champions, and elite musicians - found that individuals who achieved peak performance early in life were not always the same people to reach high success in adulthood.
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fromNature
4 days ago

NASA won't bring Mars samples back to Earth: this is the science that will be lost

A bipartisan spending bill cuts the Mars Sample Return programme, likely cancelling plans to bring Perseverance's Martian samples back to Earth.
fromBig Think
4 days ago

Aerial aliens: Why cloudy worlds might make detecting life easier

I think the first thing to remember is: We are right at the beginning of this adventure. There's so much excitement that every little signal - every "wiggle" in a spectrum - gets people saying, "Oh! That might be life!" And then, on the other side, other people respond with, "I don't see enough wiggles, so there's probably not even an atmosphere. Dead planet. Move on." Both reactions are too fast.
Science
fromwww.mercurynews.com
3 days ago

Why earthquake swarms happen and what they mean for California

Earthquakes usually strike without warning. But sometimes they come in clusters dozens or even hundreds of small quakes concentrated in one area over days or weeks. Geologists call these clusters earthquake swarms, and while they can be unsettling, scientists say they rarely signal that a major quake is imminent. Unlike the familiar pattern of a single large earthquake followed by aftershocks, swarms consist of many small quakes without a clear mainshock.
Science
fromTheregister
4 days ago

Very tough microbes may help us cement our future on Mars

A global research team has analyzed the prospects for biomineralization on Mars, a process in which bacteria, fungi, and microalgae can create minerals as part of their metabolism, offering a byproduct that could be useful to prospective Martian explorers by providing the raw materials needed to produce aggregates such as concrete. With an extremely thin and mostly carbon dioxide atmosphere, air pressure less than 1 percent of Earth's,
Science
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fromBig Think
4 days ago

Ask Ethan: What does "gravitationally bound" mean in the expanding Universe?

Gravitationally bound systems remain together when mutual gravity overcomes cosmic expansion; only stronger expansion or external influences can separate bound components.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
4 days ago

These Bizarre, Centuries-Old Sharks May Have a Hidden Longevity Superpower

Greenland sharks are a biological anomaly. The animals can grow to more than 20 feet long, weigh more than a ton and can live for nearly 400 years, making the species the longest-living vertebrate on the planeta fact that could help unlock secrets to enhancing longevity. And now, in a study published this week in Nature Communications, scientists dial in to one of the Greenland shark's more remarkable features: it has functioning eyes and, more remarkably, maintains its vision well into senescence.
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Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
4 days ago

A Guide to the Best Skywatching of 2026

2026 features predictable and unique astronomical events, including Jupiter's opposition on January 10, providing bright, all-night viewing opportunities.
Science
fromTravel + Leisure
4 days ago

A Rare Eclipse Streak Starts in 2026 Including the 'Eclipse of the Century'-and These Destinations Will Have the Best Views

Annual total solar eclipses in 2026, 2027, and 2028 will offer unusually long, accessible paths of totality across Europe, North Africa, and the Middle East.
Science
fromDefector
4 days ago

Leonardo da Vinci's Legacy Won't Be Found In His DNA | Defector

Researchers potentially recovered DNA from a drawing attributed to Leonardo da Vinci, but the human DNA cannot yet be conclusively attributed to Leonardo.
fromArs Technica
4 days ago

These 60,000-year-old poison arrows are oldest yet found

Poisoned arrows or darts have long been used by cultures all over the world for hunting or warfare. For example, there are recipes for poisoning projective weapons, and deploying them in battle, in Greek and Roman historical documents, as well as references in Greek mythology and Homer's Iliad and Odyssey. Chinese warriors over the ages did the same, as did the Gauls and Scythians, and some Native American populations.
Science
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
4 days ago

The Weight-Loss Drug RevolutionShots, Pills and the Science behind the Hype

GLP-1 drugs mimic intestinal glucagon-like peptide 1 to boost insulin, alter metabolic signals, and are expanding from diabetes treatment to widespread weight-loss use and new formulations.
Science
fromNature
6 days ago

Daily briefing: How 400-year-old sharks keep their vision sharp

Greenland sharks retain functional vision into extreme old age, offering potential insights into human age-related vision loss.
Science
fromwww.bbc.com
5 days ago

Inside the sub-zero lair of the world's most powerful computer

Quantum computing hardware, exemplified by Google's Willow, could determine economic, financial, and national-security dominance in the 21st century.
fromThe Atlantic
5 days ago

Inside Donald Trump's Attack on NASA's Science Missions

On Mars, in the belly of a rover named Perseverance, a titanium tube holds a stone more precious than any diamond or ruby on Earth. The robot spotted it in 2024 along the banks of a Martian riverbed and zapped it with an ultraviolet laser. It contained ancient layers of mud, compressed into shale in the 3.5 billion years since the river last coursed across the red planet.
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fromIrish Independent
4 days ago

'You are going to accomplish incredible things in the years to come,' Stripe co-founder tells young scientists

Patrick Collison returned to the Young Scientist & Technology Exhibition, met students across 550 projects, and Stripe now sponsors the event.
Science
fromArs Technica
5 days ago

Former Google CEO plans to singlehandedly fund a Hubble telescope replacement

Eric and Wendy Schmidt are funding four new telescopes, including the space-based Lazuli, signaling a resurgence of private telescope philanthropy.
Science
fromNextgov.com
4 days ago

Sens. Young, Cantwell introduce National Quantum Initiative Reauthorization

Reauthorizes the National Quantum Initiative through 2034, funds federal quantum research centers and programs, and coordinates international and public-private quantum R&D and workforce development.
Science
fromwww.nature.com
5 days ago

Author Correction: Structural insights into BCDX2 complex function in homologous recombination

Figure kymographs and several Source Data columns were duplicated during preparation; the figures and Source Data have been corrected and relabelled, with main conclusions unchanged.
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