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fromwww.theguardian.com
2 hours ago

Nasa's Artemis II rocket begins slow crawl to launchpad in preparation for moon fly-by

NASA aims to launch Artemis II for a lunar fly-around on April 1, 2024, after overcoming technical delays.
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
6 hours ago

Nasa returns moon rocket to pad and targets 1 April launch

NASA is returning the SLS rocket and Orion spacecraft to Florida for a planned moon flyby after completing necessary repairs.
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 hours ago

Nasa's Artemis II rocket begins slow crawl to launchpad in preparation for moon fly-by

NASA aims to launch Artemis II for a lunar fly-around on April 1, 2024, after overcoming technical delays.
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
6 hours ago

Nasa returns moon rocket to pad and targets 1 April launch

NASA is returning the SLS rocket and Orion spacecraft to Florida for a planned moon flyby after completing necessary repairs.
Science
fromEngadget
3 hours ago

Blue Origin also wants to put AI data centers in space

Blue Origin plans to deploy 51,600 satellites for an orbital AI data center to enhance computing capacity for artificial intelligence.
Science
fromMail Online
2 hours ago

Can Iran see US stealth jets? Experts reveal how invisible they are

Iran claims to have hit an F-35 fighter jet, challenging its stealth capabilities.
Science
from24/7 Wall St.
1 hour ago

1 No-Brainer Space Stock to Buy Before Analysts Drive It to $90 A Share

Rocket Lab's significant backlog and improving margins position it favorably for growth heading into 2026.
fromdesignboom | architecture & design magazine
15 hours ago

stretchable robotic fingers for surgery decomposes in soil and becomes fertilizer

The body of the robotic fingers is built from polyglycerol sebacate, a synthetic elastomer made from glycerol and sebacic acid. Glycerol is a byproduct of biodiesel production while sebacic acid is derived from castor oil, and both of them are plant-based. Polyglycerol sebacate is safe since it is already used in medical implants because the body can absorb it without a toxic response.
Science
Science
fromNature
2 days ago

Daily briefing: Funding calls plummet as NIH turns away from agency-directed science

The NIH shifts funding strategy toward unsolicited research proposals driven by individual scientists' interests rather than addressing specific scientific problems.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Something extremely weird is happening to our galactic neighbor. Scientists think they know why

The Small Magellanic Cloud's unusually slow stellar rotation results from a hundred-million-year-old collision with the Large Magellanic Cloud that disrupted its normal dynamical state.
Science
fromTechCrunch
1 day ago

K2 to launch its first high-powered satellite for space compute | TechCrunch

K2 Space is launching Gravitas, a high-powered satellite capable of generating 20 kW of electricity to demonstrate technology for building orbital data centers.
Science
fromArs Technica
19 hours ago

Dogfighting in space won't look like the movies, but this company wants in on it

True Anomaly's Jackal satellite platform represents a new approach to space warfare, emphasizing precision, maneuverability, and deliberate planning rather than rapid combat scenarios.
Science
fromNature
1 day ago

China could be the world's biggest public funder of science within two years

China's government research spending is projected to surpass the United States within two to three years, marking a historic shift in global scientific leadership.
Science
fromCornell Chronicle
1 day ago

Alum Gilles Brassard receives Turing Award, highest CS honor | Cornell Chronicle

Gilles Brassard and Charles Bennett won the 2025 Turing Award for founding quantum information science and developing BB84 quantum cryptography for secure communication.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Gerd Faltings, mathematician who proved the Mordell conjecture, wins the Abel Prize at age 71

Gerd Faltings won the Abel Prize for proving Mordell conjecture, establishing that curves with variables raised to powers higher than 3 have finitely many rational points.
fromNature
1 day ago

Mathematician who reshaped number theory wins prestigious Abel prize

Faltings was awarded the prize for work proving central results in the theory of algebraic equations linking whole numbers together. The prize highlights Faltings's work in 1983 on the theory of Diophantine equations, which are equations involving sums and powers of unknown numbers for which the solutions have to be rational - meaning they can be written as a fraction of two whole numbers, or integers.
Science
Science
fromYanko Design - Modern Industrial Design News
2 days ago

A Student Built a Pocket Planet Tracker That Works Without Your Phone - Yanko Design

Lumen Orbit is a handheld device designed to maintain awareness of celestial events through real-time planetary data and haptic notifications without requiring apps or telescopes.
Science
fromThe Cipher Brief
2 days ago

Why the U.S. Must Build the Ultimate Multi-Modal Foundation Model

Advanced AI models like AlphaEarth demonstrate pixel-level geospatial intelligence capabilities that must be integrated into U.S. national security frameworks to maintain technological leadership.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

There might be less water on the moon than we'd hoped

New analysis of lunar crater imagery suggests water ice comprises less than 20-30% of material in the moon's darkest regions, with many craters potentially containing no surface ice.
fromThe Cipher Brief
2 days ago

GPS Denied: Time to Upgrade

On February 28, ships navigating the Strait of Hormuz started appearing on tracking screens in places they couldn't possibly be. They appeared to be sitting on airport runways, parked on Iranian land, and clustered at nuclear power plants. More than 1,100 commercial vessels had their navigation systems scrambled in a single day following US-Israeli airstrikes on Iran, bringing a waterway that handles a fifth of the world's oil exports to a halt.
Science
Science
fromArs Technica
1 day ago

A private space company has a radical new plan to bag an asteroid

TransAstra plans to capture a house-sized asteroid and relocate it to a processing facility near Earth to harvest water and minerals for space-based manufacturing and propellant production.
#robert-goddard
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Modern rocketry turns 100and NASA says the best is yet to come

Robert Goddard's 1926 liquid-fueled rocket launch revolutionized spaceflight by providing superior thrust and control compared to solid-fuel rockets, enabling modern space exploration.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Modern rocketry turns 100and NASA says the best is yet to come

Robert Goddard's 1926 liquid-fueled rocket launch revolutionized spaceflight by providing superior thrust and control compared to solid-fuel rockets, enabling modern space exploration.
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

Is this the world's first quantum battery? Australian scientists say so

Australian scientists created the first quantum battery prototype that completes a full charge-discharge cycle, demonstrating that larger quantum batteries charge faster due to collective quantum effects.
Science
fromwww.dw.com
2 days ago

Iran war triggers helium shortage, hits semiconductor supply

Helium shortage threatens semiconductor chip production, with no viable substitutes for ultra-high-purity helium required in chipmaking processes.
fromFast Company
1 day ago

Northern lights tonight: Don't miss your chance to catch a visible aurora borealis in 19 states. Here's the forecast for where and when

The aurora borealis is the result of a geomagnetic storm that occurs when a coronal mass ejection (CME), an eruption of solar material, reaches Earth and causes swaths of green, blue, and purple colors to appear in the dark sky. We are currently seeing increased solar activity as the result of an 11-year sun cycle peak.
Science
Science
fromNature
2 days ago

Synthetic circuits for cell ratio control - Nature

Synthetic biology enables artificial cell differentiation and division of labor by engineering genetic and epigenetic circuits that mimic natural stem cell asymmetric division processes.
Science
fromwww.nature.com
2 days ago

Bistable superlattice switching in a quantum spin Hall insulator

Monolayer TaIrTe4 exhibits bistable superlattice switching between two lattice configurations with dramatically different periodicities, controllable through electrostatic tuning of electronic states.
Science
fromNature
2 days ago

Founders of quantum information win top prize in computer science

Gilles Brassard and Charles Bennett won the Turing Award for establishing quantum information science foundations and enabling secure quantum communication and computing.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 days ago

More than 10,000 SpaceX Starlink spacecraft now orbit Earthand the satellite surge shows no sign of stopping

SpaceX's Starlink constellation has reached over 10,000 active satellites in orbit, representing approximately two-thirds of all operational satellites and fundamentally transforming Earth's orbital environment and night sky.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 days ago

April 2026: Science history from 50, 100 and 150 years ago

California's 1969 education guidelines mandated equal classroom time for Genesis creation accounts and evolutionary theory, reflecting broader cultural resistance to scientific authority in public institutions.
Science
fromNature
4 days ago

Daily briefing: How labs are coping with 'RAMmageddon'

Global RAM chip shortage driven by AI demand forces researchers to innovate with more efficient algorithms and hardware, with supply recovery expected in 18+ months.
#artemis-program
fromTheregister
2 days ago
Science

Artemis II takes a rain check on return to launch pad

NASA delayed the Artemis II rocket rollout by one day to March 20 to replace a faulty electrical harness in the flight termination system, but maintains an April 1 launch target.
fromFuturism
5 days ago
Science

NASA Has No Plan to Rescue Lunar Astronauts in Case of Emergency

NASA downgraded Artemis III from a lunar landing to a spacecraft test mission, acknowledging inability to rescue stranded astronauts from the Moon's surface.
Science
fromTheregister
2 days ago

Artemis II takes a rain check on return to launch pad

NASA delayed the Artemis II rocket rollout by one day to March 20 to replace a faulty electrical harness in the flight termination system, but maintains an April 1 launch target.
Science
fromFuturism
5 days ago

NASA Has No Plan to Rescue Lunar Astronauts in Case of Emergency

NASA downgraded Artemis III from a lunar landing to a spacecraft test mission, acknowledging inability to rescue stranded astronauts from the Moon's surface.
Science
fromFuturism
3 days ago

Thousands of Chinese Ships Form Strange Shape in Ocean

Thousands of Chinese fishing vessels have formed unusually organized geometric formations in the East China Sea, raising concerns about potential military coordination and naval drills.
Science
fromNextgov.com
2 days ago

Energy opens applications for $293 million in research funding

The Department of Energy is allocating $293 million to fund interdisciplinary teams using artificial intelligence to solve critical challenges in advanced manufacturing, biotechnology, critical materials, nuclear energy, and quantum information science.
Science
fromNextgov.com
2 days ago

Golden Dome's projected cost just jumped $10 billion. Experts fear that's just for starters.

Golden Dome's official cost projection increased to $185 billion, but independent experts estimate actual expenses could reach $542 billion to $3.6 trillion over the project's lifetime.
Science
fromwww.nature.com
3 days ago

Triple-junction solar cells with improved carrier and photon management

Perovskite-silicon tandem solar cells achieve record efficiency through optimized interface engineering and reduced defect density in perovskite layers.
Science
fromwww.nature.com
3 days ago

Molecular basis of oocyte cytoplasmic lattice assembly

Cryo-EM reveals the cytoplasmic lattice in mammalian oocytes comprises repeating U-shaped basket and adapter ring units with 14 protein subunits, essential for oocyte maturation and embryonic development.
Science
fromNature
3 days ago

How the Pokemon franchise has helped to shape neuroscience

Pokémon's shared childhood experience influences brain organization and has impacted scientific research across ecology, evolution, and research integrity.
Science
fromMail Online
4 days ago

Scientists create a clock so precise it could REDEFINE the second

Scientists created a strontium optical lattice clock accurate to 19 decimal places, meeting requirements to redefine the second within the next decade.
Science
fromFuturism
3 days ago

Chinese Space Station Astronauts Harvest Space Tomatoes

China's Tiangong space station successfully harvested space-grown tomatoes using an aeroponic system, with plans to cultivate wheat, carrots, and medicinal plants for long-duration deep space missions.
fromMail Online
4 days ago

Humanity receives mysterious 'mega-laser' signal from unknown source

This system is truly extraordinary. We are seeing the radio equivalent of a laser halfway across the universe. This galaxy acts as a lens, the way a water droplet on a window pane would, because its mass curves the local space-time. So we have a radio laser passing through a cosmic telescope before being detected by the powerful MeerKAT radio telescope.
Science
fromArs Technica
4 days ago

A century after the first rocket launch, Ars staffers pick their favorites

Robert Goddard, a Massachusetts-born physicist, launched the world's first liquid-fueled rocket on this date 100 years ago. It was not an overly impressive flight. The rocket, fueled by gasoline and liquid oxygen, rose just 41 feet into the air, and the flight lasted 2.5 seconds before it struck ice and snow. Nevertheless, this rocket, named "Nell," represented a historic achievement that would help launch the modern age of spaceflight.
Science
Science
fromThe Verge
3 days ago

I met Olaf - the Frozen robot who might be the future of Disney Parks

Disney's Olaf robot uses reinforcement learning trained on 100,000 simulations to achieve lifelike animated character movements, enabling rapid deployment of interactive characters to theme parks.
fromArs Technica
4 days ago

The science of how fireflies stay in sync

The fireflies were most likely to change their own flashing rhythm in response when the LED blinked almost, but not quite, at the same time as the fireflies. The males would speed up their next flash if the LED blinked just before and waited a bit longer for their next flash when the LED blinked right after.
Science
fromwww.nature.com
4 days ago

Direct conversion from alkenes to alkynes

Alkynes are widely used as feedstock chemicals and functional groups in organic chemistry. However, while the hydrogenation from an alkyne to an alkene is well established, typical methods for the reverse reaction—conversion of an alkene to an alkyne—are based on elimination chemistry reported in the 1860s and use forcing conditions (strong base or high temperatures).
Science
fromFuturism
5 days ago

Researchers Upload Fly's Brain to Matrix, Let It Control Virtual Body

Eon Systems created a computational model of a fruit fly's 125,000 neurons and 50 million synapses that exhibits multiple behaviors in a virtual environment with 95% accuracy in predicting motor behavior.
#biological-computing
Science
fromFuturism
5 days ago

New Data Centers Will Be Powered by Human Brain Cells

Cortical Labs is building biological data centers using living human neurons as computing units, consuming far less power than traditional AI processors.
Science
fromTheregister
6 days ago

Inside datacenter where day starts with cerebrospinal fluid

Cortical Labs operates biological computers powered by living neurons that require daily maintenance with cerebrospinal fluid and precise atmospheric conditions to function and learn faster than classical computers while consuming less energy.
Science
fromFuturism
5 days ago

New Data Centers Will Be Powered by Human Brain Cells

Cortical Labs is building biological data centers using living human neurons as computing units, consuming far less power than traditional AI processors.
Science
fromTheregister
6 days ago

Inside datacenter where day starts with cerebrospinal fluid

Cortical Labs operates biological computers powered by living neurons that require daily maintenance with cerebrospinal fluid and precise atmospheric conditions to function and learn faster than classical computers while consuming less energy.
Science
fromWIRED
5 days ago

A New Study Details How Cats Almost Always Land on Their Feet

Cats land safely by rotating their flexible thoracic spine while their stiffer lumbar spine acts as a stabilizing anchor during midair righting maneuvers.
Science
fromFuturism
6 days ago

Something May Be Scrambling Alien Messages, NASA-Funded Research Finds

Space weather phenomena near alien planets could broaden and scatter extraterrestrial signals across multiple frequencies, making them undetectable by current SETI searches focused on narrow frequency bands.
#artemis-ii-mission
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 week ago
Science

NASA says it's a go' for a fresh Artemis II moon launch attempt but admits risks remain

NASA targets April 1, 2025 for Artemis II moon mission launch, carrying four astronauts on a record-breaking lunar journey, pending hardware readiness and safety verification.
fromwww.dw.com
1 week ago
Science

Artemis II launch 'on track' for as soon as April, says NASA

NASA targets April 1, 2025 for Artemis II crewed moon mission launch, marking humanity's first lunar journey in over 50 years, pending completion of remaining technical work and repairs.
Science
fromArs Technica
6 days ago

NASA officials sidestepped questions on Artemis II risks-there's a reason why

Artemis II presents unprecedented risks as the first crewed lunar mission in over 50 years, traveling beyond the Moon with limited flight data to quantify danger.
Science
fromMail Online
1 week ago

April Fool's Day prank? NASA claims Artemis II will launch on April 1

NASA targets April 1 launch for Artemis II moon mission after fixing hydrogen leaks and helium blockages that caused previous delays.
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Nasa on track' for Artemis II moon mission launch as soon as 1 April

NASA targets April 1 for Artemis II launch, the first crewed lunar flyby in over 50 years, with multiple launch windows available within a six-day period.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 week ago

NASA says it's a go' for a fresh Artemis II moon launch attempt but admits risks remain

NASA targets April 1, 2025 for Artemis II moon mission launch, carrying four astronauts on a record-breaking lunar journey, pending hardware readiness and safety verification.
Science
fromwww.dw.com
1 week ago

Artemis II launch 'on track' for as soon as April, says NASA

NASA targets April 1, 2025 for Artemis II crewed moon mission launch, marking humanity's first lunar journey in over 50 years, pending completion of remaining technical work and repairs.
Science
fromScienceDaily
6 days ago

A lab mistake at Cambridge reveals a powerful new way to modify drug molecules

Cambridge researchers developed an LED-powered photochemical technique that enables late-stage modification of complex drug molecules without toxic chemicals or metal catalysts, accelerating drug development.
Science
fromArs Technica
1 week ago

Rocket Report: Pentagon needs more missile interceptors; Artemis II clears review

SpaceX commissions a second launch pad at Starbase in Texas while NASA prepares Artemis II for April 1 launch and Firefly's Alpha rocket successfully returns to flight after ten months.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
6 days ago

24 mice launched to orbit in 2023. What happened to their bodies could help humans better survive in space

A study of mice on the International Space Station identifies 0.67g as a critical gravity threshold below which muscle function deteriorates, informing future long-duration space missions to Mars and beyond.
Science
fromArs Technica
6 days ago

Magnetars drag spacetime to power superluminous supernovae

Frame-dragging from rapidly spinning magnetars explains the irregular light patterns observed in superluminous supernovae, resolving a long-standing discrepancy between theory and observations.
Science
fromTheregister
1 week ago

NASA aims for April 1 launch for Artemis II

NASA targets April 1, 2025 for Artemis II launch with the Space Launch System, skipping further wet dress rehearsals to proceed directly to launch day tanking.
Science
fromThe Atlantic
6 days ago

Why Is It So Hard to Make a Good Weather App?

Weather forecasts are inherently uncertain due to atmospheric chaos, and apps struggle to communicate this uncertainty while users expect perfect predictions despite having unprecedented meteorological data.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 week ago

Mathematicians find one pi formula to rule them all

For more than two millennia, mathematicians have produced a growing heap of pi equations in their ongoing search for methods to calculate pi faster and faster. The pile of equations has now grown into the thousands, and algorithms now can generate an infinitude. Each discovery has arrived alone, as a fragment, with no obvious connection to the others. But now, for the first time, centuries of pi formulas have been shown to be part of a unified, formerly hidden structure.
Science
fromSlate Magazine
1 week ago

It's the Most Famous Line in NASA History. You've Heard It a Million Times. The Future of the Agency Now Depends on Remembering It.

NASA's hard-won reputation for extreme competence is why Artemis, the agency's troubled and long-delayed program to return astronauts to the moon, has been so dismaying-and why everyone is eager to see if the new NASA administrator, Jared Isaacman, can right the ship.
Science
Science
fromThe New Yorker
1 week ago

Why Do Mind-Altering Drugs Make People Feel Better?

Scientists are developing psychedelics that provide mental health benefits without inducing hallucinogenic experiences by separating the therapeutic effects from the perceptual alterations.
Science
fromMail Online
1 week ago

Frozen brains REAWAKEN in astonishing medical breakthrough

German researchers successfully restored functional activity in frozen brain tissue using vitrification, a technique that prevents ice crystal formation by rapidly cooling tissue to a glass-like state.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 week ago

Have astronomers found a runaway monster black hole or just a very weird galaxy?

Astronomers discovered RBH-1, a potentially runaway supermassive black hole traveling at over three million kilometers per hour, though ambiguous data makes its true nature uncertain.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 week ago

Raccoons will solve puzzles just for fun

Raccoons have very dense brains, and that likely explains their heightened ability to solve problems and to be behaviorally flexible, says Lauren Stanton, a cognitive ecologist at the University of California, Berkeley. But new research published in Animal Behaviour suggests raccoons will try to solve problems even when they don't expect a food reward for the work.
Science
Science
fromMail Online
1 week ago

Length of days on Earth is increasing at an 'unprecedented' rate

Earth's days are lengthening at 1.33 milliseconds per century due to climate change, the fastest rate in 3.6 million years, caused by melting polar ice shifting mass toward the equator.
Science
fromEngadget
1 week ago

NASA will try its Artemis II launch again in early April

NASA targets April 1 for Artemis II launch with four potential launch opportunities between April 1-6, pending final preparations and hardware readiness.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 week ago

Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS is exceptionally alcoholic

Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS contains exceptionally high levels of methanol, far exceeding typical comet compositions and providing insights into conditions beyond our solar system.
fromFuturism
1 week ago

China's Moon Landing Is Starting to Look Very Real

Four prospective landing sites in the traversable areas of the Sinus Aestuum basin and neighboring Rimae Bode provide a range of diverse geological samples, including volcanic debris, mare basalts, Copernicus crater ejecta and high-thorium materials. Such a collection may provide insights into the geological evolution of the region and enhance our understanding of the lunar mantle composition and volcanic processes.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 week ago

GPS spoofing is scrambling ships in the Strait of Hormuz

In the two weeks since the U.S. and Israel launched attacks against Iran, thousands of vessels have experienced navigation interference in the Persian Gulf. Commercial shipping through the strait, which carries roughly 20 percent of the world's oil, has nearly ground to a halt. Though rocket and drone attacks are also to blame, another major hazard is GPS spoofing—the transmission of counterfeit satellite navigation signals.
Science
fromwww.mediaite.com
1 week ago

Trump's New NASA Boss Says He's Gonna Build' a Base on the Moon

We're returning to the moon and we're gonna stay. We're gonna build a lunar base. And next up is Artemis II, which is America's moon rocket, it's right behind me, 8.8 million pounds of thrust, we're gonna send four astronauts around the moon in a matter of weeks, safely back to Earth, and then we're gonna set up for missions every year, again in '27 until '28, when we land on moon.
Science
#science-fiction-and-spaceflight
Science
fromInverse
1 week ago

Project Realistic Spaceflight: How Pop Sci-Fi Is Entering An Incredible New Era

Science fiction has shifted toward greater scientific accuracy in recent years, with mainstream projects increasingly consulting real scientists and reflecting authentic spaceflight principles.
fromInverse
1 week ago
Science

Project Realistic Spaceflight: How Pop Sci-Fi Is Entering An Incredible New Era

Science
fromInverse
1 week ago

Project Realistic Spaceflight: How Pop Sci-Fi Is Entering An Incredible New Era

Science fiction has shifted toward greater scientific accuracy in recent years, with mainstream projects increasingly consulting real scientists and reflecting authentic spaceflight principles.
fromInverse
1 week ago
Science

Project Realistic Spaceflight: How Pop Sci-Fi Is Entering An Incredible New Era

Science
fromFlowingData
1 week ago

Shades of a lunar eclipse

A total lunar eclipse on March 3, 2026 was observed over western Alaska and the Bering Strait, with NASA Earth Observatory mapping showing brightness variations before, during, and after the eclipse.
Science
fromNature
1 week ago

Daily briefing: 'Virtual cell' simulates nearly every chemical reaction in the real thing

Researchers created a 3D virtual bacterial cell simulation modeling DNA replication, cell division, and chemical reactions to understand how molecular interactions generate life.
Science
fromMail Online
1 week ago

NASA spacecraft lands in the Pacific Ocean near the Galapagos Islands

NASA's Van Allen Probe A satellite, in orbit for over 14 years, re-entered Earth's atmosphere and crashed into the East Pacific Ocean near the Galapagos Islands with minimal risk to human life.
fromTheregister
1 week ago

UK facility to make exotic materials for hypersonic missiles

CMCs are a composite material, one in which the fibers are ceramic or carbon, embedded in a ceramic matrix. They are created to overcome the brittleness of traditional ceramics, while providing high-temperature resistance, light weight, and high strength. According to DSTL, they are capable of withstanding temperatures exceeding 1,000°C (1,832°F), and unlike metals, they hold their strength and shape under extreme heat and stress.
Science
fromTechCrunch
1 week ago

Google is using old news reports and AI to predict flash floods | TechCrunch

While humans have assembled a lot of weather data, flash floods are too short-lived and localized to be measured comprehensively, the way the temperature or even river flows are monitored over time. That data gap means that deep learning models, which are increasingly capable of forecasting the weather, aren't able to predict flash floods.
Science
Science
fromNature
1 week ago

How bioRxiv changed the way biologists share ideas - in numbers

bioRxiv has grown to over 310,000 preprints since 2013, with neuroscientists as top users and monthly submissions reaching 4,000 by 2025, demonstrating widespread acceptance of preprint publishing in scientific research.
Science
fromTheregister
1 week ago

Solar activity brings spacecraft back to Earth years early

NASA's Van Allen Probe A re-entered Earth's atmosphere eight years earlier than expected due to an unusually active solar cycle causing greater atmospheric drag than predicted.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 week ago

Find pi today just by flipping coins

Sometimes the reason pi shows up in randomly generated values is obvious—if there are circles or angles involved, pi is your guy. But sometimes the circle is cleverly hidden, and sometimes the reason pi pops up is a mathematical mystery!
Science
fromNews Center
1 week ago

Calcium Signaling Channels Regulate Neuroinflammation and Motivation - News Center

This could open up some interesting possibilities for therapeutic interventions for depression-like behaviors or maladaptive changes in motivational behaviors down the road where microglia are known to play a really important role.
Science
Science
fromBig Think
1 week ago

A quirk of relativity is the closest thing to achieving immortality

While immortality is impossible due to thermodynamic laws, relativity reveals physical scenarios that maximize lifespan relative to the universe by manipulating spacetime through motion and gravity.
Science
fromNature
1 week ago

No such thing as a shark? Genomes shake up ocean predator's family tree

Sharks may not form a natural biological group; hexanchiformes might be more closely related to rays and skates than to other sharks, making sharks a paraphyletic group.
fromwww.independent.co.uk
1 week ago

Bees can breathe underwater for a week, scientists discover

This study started from a discussion with my co-author and postdoctoral researcher, Sabrina Rondeau, whose recent findings showed that these queens can survive submersion for over a week, which is extraordinary for a terrestrial insect. We wanted to understand how that's even possible.
Science
Science
fromDefector
1 week ago

This Pink Bug Is Not A 'Rare Freak Mutant' After All | Defector

A neon pink katydid discovered in Panama challenges the century-old assumption that pink coloration in these insects is a disadvantageous mutation, suggesting it may provide evolutionary advantages.
Science
fromSFGATE
1 week ago

Experts skeptical this California startup can turn night into day

A Los Angeles startup plans to deploy thousands of satellites with large mirrors to reflect sunlight onto Earth at night for commercial illumination, but scientists warn of severe ecological and environmental consequences.
Science
fromFuturism
1 week ago

Please Resist the Urge to Drink the Melted Sludge From 3I/ATLAS

Interstellar object 3I/ATLAS contains unusually high methanol levels, exceeding almost all known comets in our solar system, providing insights into composition from another star system.
Science
fromTheregister
1 week ago

NASA watchdog pokes holes in Artermis lunar lander program

NASA's lunar Human Landing System contracts with SpaceX and Blue Origin present significant operational risks, including Starship's extreme height, potential tipping hazards, and elevator dependency for crew egress.
Science
fromArs Technica
1 week ago

Quantum computing meets the Mobius molecule

IBM used a quantum computer algorithm to help create a molecule with half-Möbius topology, demonstrating quantum computation's growing practical utility in chemistry.
Science
fromBig Think
1 week ago

NASA's next X-ray mission, AXIS, has been killed

NASA cancelled the AXIS X-ray mission in March 2026 due to programmatic constraints, delaying the next major X-ray observatory by a decade to the 2050s-2060s, despite Chandra's 1999 launch making it outdated for current scientific needs.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

The moon is safe': asteroid is not on collision course, scientists confirm

Discovered in December 2024, asteroid 2024 YR4 was briefly considered the most dangerous asteroid in decades after scientists initially estimated it had a 3.1% chance of colliding with the Earth in 2032. Closer observations quickly ruled out a city killer scenario, but instead astronomers calculated there was a 4.3% chance that the moon lay in the path of impact.
Science
Science
fromArchDaily
1 week ago

Gateway in Lunar Orbit: Extending Architecture Beyond Earth

The technosphere—humanity's 30 trillion-ton network of artifacts—is expanding beyond Earth through NASA's Artemis program, establishing permanent orbital infrastructure around the Moon via the Gateway space station.
Science
fromNature
1 week ago

Physics at risk: UK science leader on what's wrong with the latest funding cuts

UK Research and Innovation suspended grant reviews and cut funding in particle physics, astronomy, and nuclear physics to prioritize economically-focused research, prompting concerns from the physics community about inadequate government planning.
Science
fromWIRED
5 years ago

The Air Force's Venerable F-15 Gets a Makeover

Boeing's upgraded F-15 fighter jet completed its first flight test, demonstrating advanced capabilities including vertical takeoff, with initial delivery to Qatar's air force before US Air Force adoption as the F-15EX.
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