Science

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fromEngadget
4 hours ago

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

Sources told the publication that a team in Shenzhen completed the prototype of an extreme ultraviolet lithography machine earlier this year and it is allegedly now undergoing testing. The EUV machine was reportedly made by former engineers from Dutch semiconductor supplier ASML. Reuters states that China is targeting production of its own EUV chips beginning in 2028, although other experts have projected 2030 as a more likely date.
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fromFast Company
17 hours ago

A faster-than-light spaceship would actually look a lot like Star Trek's Enterprise

A feasible warp-drive geometry resembling Star Trek's Enterprise, with twin nacelles around a central habitable zone, has been proposed using updated mathematics.
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fromNature
1 day ago

MIT fusion-lab head shot dead: a horror 'impossible to believe'

MIT plasma physicist Nuno Loureiro was fatally shot at his Brookline home; police are investigating the death as a homicide.
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fromFuturism
12 hours ago

MIT Fusion Physicist Murdered in His Home

Nuno Loureiro, a leading MIT plasma physicist and fusion researcher, was murdered in his Brookline home at age 47; investigation is ongoing.
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fromBig Think
21 hours ago

The USA's Genesis Mission: moonshot or madness?

The Department of Energy's Genesis Mission aims to integrate AI across all 17 National Laboratories, promising transformative science while posing significant risks to scientific future.
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fromNature
1 day ago

An 11-qubit atom processor in silicon - Nature

Precision-placed phosphorus atoms in silicon enable long coherence, ancilla-based QND readout, native multi-qubit gates, and >99% nuclear CZ fidelities for scalable quantum processors.
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fromFortune
16 hours ago

Quantum computing could be a $198 billion industry in the next 15 years, Jefferies analyst says | Fortune

Quantum computing currently generates about $1 billion in revenue with a potential total addressable market up to $198 billion by 2040.
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fromNature
1 day ago

Seven feel-good science stories to restore your faith in 2025

US political upheaval and funding cuts threaten science, while international conservation gains, a High Seas Treaty and a shrinking Antarctic ozone hole mark 2025 progress.
#titan
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
6 hours ago

Jared Isaacman Confirmed to Head NASA at Pivotal Moment for the Space Agency

After a year of back and forth, the U.S. Senate on Wednesday confirmed Jared Isaacman, a tech billionaire who has paid to go to space twice, to head the space agency. His confirmation comes at a pivotal moment for NASA, which is under mounting pressure from both budget cuts and technical hurdles that together could scuttle its most ambitious missions.
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fromPsychology Today
8 hours ago

The Hidden Connection Between Information and Consciousness

The ordered state is a low-entropy state, and entropy measures the system's proximity to the most probable (equilibrium) state. Therefore, a system is "far from equilibrium" if its components are statistically correlated, because correlation among components is order. When parts are correlated rather than independent, you have structure.The system occupies a state that's improbable relative to chance. You can predict something about one part by knowing about another.
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fromNature
1 day ago

I've earned my PhD - what now?

Many new PhD graduates face an identity and career crossroads and can find alternative scientific careers through networking, short-term roles, and exploring nonacademic options.
fromWIRED
17 hours ago

Former Neuralink Exec Launches Organ Preservation Effort

Alameda, California-based Science is aiming to improve on current perfusion systems that continuously circulate blood through vital organs when they can no longer function on their own. The technology is used to preserve organs for transplant and as a life-support measure for patients when the heart and lungs stop working, but it's clunky and costly. Science wants to make a smaller, more portable system that could provide long-term support.
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fromNature
1 day ago

How the Romans built their empire of concrete

A unique archaeological site at Pompeii, Italy, reveals the secrets of peculiarly durable Roman building materials.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
14 hours ago

Strange Cosmic Blast May Be First-Ever Superkilonova Observed

Astronomers may have discovered a never-before-seen cosmic explosion that effectively combines a supernova with a kilonovathe blast that results when two dead, dense stars collide. When massive stars run out of fuel for nuclear fusion, they collapse, triggering a huge explosion called a supernova that blasts light out into space. These cataclysms sometimes leave behind a small dead corea dense object made mostly of neutrons called a neutron star.
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fromNews Center
12 hours ago

Noninvasive Treatment Boosts Immune Response Against Glioblastoma - News Center

Noninvasive spherical nucleic acid nanomedicine aims to overcome glioblastoma immunosuppression and improve delivery and efficacy of immunotherapy against 'cold' brain tumors.
#jared-isaacman
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fromNature
1 day ago

An integrated view of the structure and function of the human 4D nucleome - Nature

Protocol for preparing H1 cell ultrathin cryosections, immunolabeling nuclei, and collecting nuclear profiles for multiplexGAM by laser microdissection in three-NP pools.
#nsf
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fromArs Technica
12 hours ago

Trump admin threatens to break up major climate research center

The Office of Management and Budget plans to break up the National Center for Atmospheric Research, jeopardizing US climate and atmospheric science research.
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fromTheregister
11 hours ago

NASA tries savin' MAVEN as Mars probe loses contact

NASA is attempting to reestablish contact with MAVEN, which may be tumbling and off its predicted orbit following a loss of signal.
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fromBig Think
14 hours ago

The next revolution in neuroscience is happening outside the lab

Neuroscience historically focused on isolated circuits in constrained lab tasks, neglecting neural activity during natural behavior; new technologies now enable studies of freely moving subjects.
#exoplanet
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fromArs Technica
5 hours ago

Physicists 3D-printed a Christmas tree of ice

Evaporative cooling enables low-cost vacuum-chamber 3D printing of an 8 cm ice Christmas tree without refrigeration or cryogenics.
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fromNature
1 day ago

Is bird flu the next pandemic? The science so far

H5N1 avian influenza is spreading globally among birds and mammals, increasing pandemic risk and requiring surveillance, preparedness, and prevention measures.
fromHarvard Gazette
9 hours ago

Stopping the next pandemic - Harvard Gazette

A team of researchers from the Broad Institute and Harvard began to suspect nearly two decades ago that so-called "emerging diseases" such as Ebola and Lassa virus were not quite what they seemed. Rather than being newly evolved contagions, mounting evidence suggested they were ancient pathogens that had circulated among humans for thousands of years. What really was emerging was accurate diagnosis: Medicine only recently had acquired the ability to detect these diseases and track the toll of outbreaks.
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#3iatlas
#interstellar-comet
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fromNature
1 day ago

Astrocyte CCN1 stabilizes neural circuits in the adult brain - Nature

Rats and mice were maintained under controlled housing and used in genetically defined mouse lines, including astrocyte-Ribotag and tamoxifen-inducible Ccn1 conditional knockouts, with blinded analysis.
fromNature
1 day ago

GTP release-selective agonists prolong opioid analgesic efficacy - Nature

Heterotrimeric G proteins transduce information to intracellular partners by modulating GTP binding and hydrolysis3. Through their interaction with G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) and effectors, G proteins provide the transducer function that is necessary for the conveyance of extracellular information4,5. Heterotrimeric G proteins consist of an α subunit bound to a β and γ subunit dimer; they remain a trimer while the α subunit is bound to GDP6.
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fromNature
1 day ago

A universal flu vaccine has proved challenging - could it finally be possible?

On the basis of surveillance data on which strains were circulating, the WHO selected four that would become the foundation of that year's vaccine. One was an H3N2 virus strain that was the most prevalent of that particular subtype, at that moment. But by the time the vaccine was making its way into people's arms that autumn, a different version of the virus had taken over - and the vaccine was only 6% effective at protecting against it.
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fromNature
1 day ago

Genes don't explain what made humans different

Many supposed human-specific genetic variants are less unique than believed, weakening their explanatory power for behavioral differences between Homo sapiens and Neanderthals/Denisovans.
fromBusiness Insider
10 hours ago

New tech will soon be turning Marine light vehicles into roaming drone- and aircraft-killers

Placed on top of a pair of Joint Light Tactical Vehicles, MADIS converts the vehicles into a single short-ranged ground-based air defense system. The vehicles work together, with one focused on countering drones and the other geared toward helicopters and fixed-wing aircraft. MADIS uses Stinger missiles and a 30mm cannon for those targets, and it also comes with radars and electronic warfare systems. Marines can also use MADIS while on the move, giving the service a mobile air defense option.
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fromThe Atlantic
11 hours ago

Day 17 of the 2025 Space Telescope Advent Calendar: Distant Starbursts

Last year, the James Webb Space Telescope made this observation of a dwarf irregular galaxy named I Zwicky 18, some 59 million light-years away from Earth. At the heart of the galaxy are two major star-forming regions surrounded by clouds of gas that have been sculpted by the stellar winds of the hot, young stars.
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fromFuturism
9 hours ago

When You Hear What Happens When They Put Lab Mice in Nature, You Might Rethink Your Entire Life

Lab mice are subjected to countless horrors during their short lives, from being injected with cancerous cells to getting exposed to microplastics or ending up dosed with cocaine. It's a controversial research standard that has long been criticized by animal rights activists. Even some in the scientific community argue they deserve better treatment, much like their human counterparts in clinical trials.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
22 hours ago

Plantwatch: Pitcher plant's sweet nectar is laced with toxic nerve agent

Nepenthes khasiana uses nectar laced with isoshinanolone and slippery sugars to incapacitate ants, causing falls into pitcher traps where they are digested.
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fromNature
1 day ago

Gene-specific selective sweeps are pervasive across human gut microbiomes - Nature

Adaptive alleles in gut bacteria evolve rapidly within hosts and spread across hosts via strain transmission and horizontal gene transfer, creating elevated local linkage disequilibrium.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Ancient Bones Hid a Buzzing Secret

Thousands of years ago in what is now the Dominican Republic, there was a cave full of bones. And those bones were full of bees. In a paleontological first, researchers have discovered that bees used the jawbones of now extinct mammals as burrows. It's not clear what species of bee was exploiting this grisly opportunityonly their smooth-walled nests were left behind, nestled in the tooth pockets of ancient rodents and sloths.
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fromNature
1 day ago

Palaeometabolomes yield biological and ecological profiles at early human sites - Nature

The metabolic rate of an organism is the sum of the energy necessary to acquire, convert and allocate energy to growth, reproduction and maintenance, which sets energetic limits on biological activities and establishes the pace and pattern of life. The temperature- and mass-dependence of metabolic rate, from the smallest unicellular organisms to the largest plants and animals9, enables one to reconstruct the metabolic rates of extinct organisms and retrodict fundamental large-scale features of their palaeoenvironments11.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Science Carries On. Here Are Our Top Topics for 2026

Renewed U.S. push for nuclear power in 2026, driven by AI energy demands and policy moves, raises safety, waste disposal, and proliferation concerns.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Readers Respond to the September 2025 Issue

Giovanni Schiaparelli's reported Martian canals resulted from optical illusions; independent observations from Madeira failed to confirm those canals.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Robot Servants Are Coming. Would You Want One?

In the future, a caregiving machine might gently lift an elderly person out of bed in the morning and help them get dressed. A cleaning bot could trundle through a child's room, picking up scattered objects, depositing toys on shelves and tucking away dirty laundry. And in a factory, mechanical hands may assemble a next-generation smartphone from its first fragile component to the finishing touch.
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fromBig Think
1 day ago

A night where awe took center stage

Awe is a universal emotion that reshapes brains, dissolves ego boundaries, and fosters generosity, creativity, resilience, and curiosity about vast mysteries.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Math Puzzle: Wrangle the Rectangles

Label nine overlapping rectangles A–I using specified intersection relations, identifying F, G, H, and I by intersection counts and deducing remaining labels.
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fromArs Technica
1 day ago

The $4.3 billion space telescope Trump tried to cancel is now complete

NASA's Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope assembly is complete and on track for launch in fall 2026.
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fromKqed
1 day ago

Scientists Say San Ramon's Latest Earthquake Swarm Is Normal, but Residents Are on Edge | KQED

San Ramon experienced a swarm of small earthquakes along the Calaveras Fault; transition-zone geology and fault fluids drive frequent swarms and risk magnitudes up to 7.3.
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fromNature
2 days ago

Safety regulations for cloning and a compass that finds true north

Genetic manipulation raised concerns about potential disease outbreaks while an unusual scientific instrument was presented to Nature's archive.
fromBig Think
1 day ago

As 2025 ends, the Standard Model still hasn't cracked

Part of the motivation for conducting science is hope: the hope that what you're doing, research-wise, could end up revolutionizing how we conceptualize reality. Although we've come so far in understanding this Universe - including what its laws and constituents are at a fundamental level, and how those fundamental components assemble to create the varied and complex reality we inhabit today - we're certain that there's still more to learn, as many paradoxes about and several important puzzles remain unsolved.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Evidence of Life on Mars Could Emerge from Labs on Earth

Cheyava Falls, an organic-rich Martian mudstone with speckled features, may record ancient microbial life, prompting sample-return efforts hindered by political and budgetary delays.
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fromenglish.elpais.com
1 day ago

The Iberian Peninsula is rotating clockwise, scientists report

The Eurasian and African plates are converging, rotating Iberia clockwise and compressing the Strait of Gibraltar, ultimately closing the Mediterranean and joining Europe and Africa.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Jane Goodall Earth medal to recognise people working to improve the world

The idea of having this medal, and Starmus being entrusted to organising it, is Jane's. Jane said she would like this to happen. And I think it's because of the very special relationship she had with us, he said. Goodall's grandson, Merlin van Lawick, welcomed the award. The Starmus Jane Goodall Earth medal will acknowledge sustainable programmes undertaken to make our world a better place for people, animals and the environment and provide encouragement for the continuation of that work, he said.
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fromThe Mercury News
1 day ago

Magnitude 3.1 earthquake is latest to shake near San Ramon

In what has become a common occurrence recently, the ground shook again in San Ramon on Tuesday, this time before sunrise. The magnitude 3.1 quake rattled the Tri-Valley at 5:53 a.m. and was centered about 3.1 miles southeast of San Ramon. There were no initial reports of damages or injuries. The quake came only eight days after three earthquakes shook the area in the course of about 100 minutes.
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fromOpen Culture
2 days ago

How Many Humans Have Ever Lived, and How Many Are Alive Right Now?

An estimated 117 billion people have ever lived on Earth, with population rising from about 5 million in 8000 B.C.E. to 8 billion in 2022.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Probiotics Help Only a Few Relatively Rare Diseases, according to Strong Science

There are microbes living in medicine cabinets across the U.S., next to the aspirin and the Band-Aids. And people want them there. Indeed, consumers probably paid good money for them. Probiotics are capsules or pills with live microorganismsalmost always bacteria or yeastthat are supposed to confer health benefits once people swallow them. Some of my friends, including a woman who was recently treated for cancer and a man with persistent digestive issues, bought the pills at the recommendation of doctors.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

How Global Warming Could Trigger a Reptile Sexpocalypse

Under no light but the stars, a green sea turtle hauls herself out of the surf and onto the familiar sand of Alagadi Beach on the northern coast of Cyprus. She doesn't notice any predators as she makes her way up the beach; tonight will be the night. When the turtle reaches a satisfactory spot, she nestles into the warm sand and begins excavating a deep pit. Nothing can distract her; she's gone into a kind of trance.
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fromThe Atlantic
1 day ago

Day 16 of the 2025 Space Telescope Advent Calendar: The Bullseye

NASA, ESA, I. Pasha, P. van Dokkum Day 16 of the 2025 Space Telescope Advent Calendar: The Bullseye. This recent image of LEDA 1313424, nicknamed the Bullseye Galaxy, was made by the Hubble Space Telescope.
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fromTechCrunch
2 days ago

Exclusive: Thea Energy previews Helios, its pixel-inspired fusion power plant | TechCrunch

A pixel-inspired stellarator design plus control software aims to reduce precision requirements and lower fusion power plant construction costs.
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fromTheregister
2 days ago

Japan just sent origami to space to test giant antennas

JAXA launched Innovative Satellite Technology Demonstration No. 4 carrying 16 experimental payloads to advance Japan's space capabilities and national space industry competitiveness.
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fromWIRED
2 days ago

Radiation-Detection Systems Are Quietly Running in the Background All Around You

Global government and citizen radiation-monitoring networks enable near-immediate detection of major nuclear accidents, improving early warning and response capabilities.
fromFuturism
2 days ago

China Is Absolutely Obsessed With Copying SpaceX's Starship Rocket

That hasn't dissuaded a growing number of Chinese companies from unabashedly ripping off the concept, as Ars Technica reports. Most recently, state-operated news outlet China.com detailed acompany called "Beijing Leading Rocket Technology" that named its latest vehicle concept Xingzhou-1 - which translates to "Starship-1" or "Starvessel-1." A render of the rocket closely resembles SpaceX's design as well, from the overall proportions down to the grid fins designed to guide the Super Heavy booster and Starship spacecraft back down to the ground.
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fromThe Atlantic
2 days ago

A Physics Renaissance Is Coming

Physics is shifting from strict reductionism toward studying living systems and information-processing principles, linking biology and AI and potentially redefining the field.
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fromNature
3 days ago

Despite all the negatives, 2025 showcased the power, resilience and universality of science

In 2025, global science faced funding cuts, political interference and nationalist pressures, yet major health, discovery, innovation, and international cooperation advances endured.
fromMedium
2 days ago

Lower the surprise: Applying The free energy principle to UX

The brain's main task is to minimize the gap between expectation and reality. This gap is what the Free Energy Principle defines as free energy. When the brain encounters unpredictable input, its stress level rises. And it's crucial to understand: this isn't about you as a person or a "user", it's about your brain. It's not something we consciously control, but it's something we can use.
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fromFuturism
2 days ago

SpaceX Furious at China, Saying It Almost Destroyed One of Its Satellites

Rapid satellite deployments and poor operator coordination are increasing orbital collision risk, shown by a near-miss between a Chinese-launched satellite and a Starlink spacecraft.
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fromArs Technica
2 days ago

Oh look, yet another Starship clone has popped up in China

Chinese launch companies and state programs are shifting from Falcon 9-style expendable designs toward fully reusable, Starship-like stainless-steel, methane-fueled vehicles and tower-catch recovery methods.
fromNews Center
2 days ago

RNA 'Quality Control' System Breaks Down in ALS - News Center

They focused on UPF1, a protein that acts like a proofreader, scanning RNA and destroying defective copies before they cause trouble. This process, called mRNA decay, is essential for healthy cells. The team discovered that UPF1 and TDP-43 normally work together to control the length of RNA messages - especially at their tail ends. These regions help regulate how long an RNA message lasts and where it goes in the cell. In ALS, these processes go haywire, leading to unstable RNA and stressed neurons.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

Rocky Planets May Make Life's Precursor, RNA, All across the Universe

Heating and drying of early-Earth mixtures containing ribose, nucleobases, reactive phosphorus, and borate can produce RNA, supporting an RNA-first origin of life.
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fromSFGATE
2 days ago

A cluster of 30 earthquakes hits Northern Calif. day after Sonoma 4.0 quake

Northern California experienced clustered small earthquakes near The Geysers and Sonoma, with induced activity linked to geothermal fluids while overall seismicity remains relatively subdued.
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Why You Do the Things You Do

In August 2025, I published my own attempt at characterizing affect, which I call the Affect Management Framework (AMF; Haynes-LaMotte, 2025). The conceptualization is grounded in the contemporary neuroscience perspectives of Predictive Processing(Clark, 2023) and Active Inference (Parr, Pezzulo, & Friston, 2022). It also draws inspiration from Ecological Psychology (Gibson, 1979; Withagen, 2022) and my own clinical experiences. Below I provide a high-level overview of the AMF, with the intention to explore each of these areas in more detail across other posts.
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fromState of the Planet
2 days ago

Scientists Search for Ancient Climate Clues Beneath Antarctic Ice

Loss of the Ross Ice Shelf could destabilize the West Antarctic Ice Sheet, risking 4–5 meters of global sea-level rise.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

A lot of stories but very few facts': sceptics push back on buzzy UFO documentary

Claims that UAPs (Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena) are real and subject to government concealment face skepticism due to blurry evidence and anecdotal testimonies.
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fromenglish.elpais.com
2 days ago

I want my dog back: The rise of pet cloning

Pet cloning services produce genetic copies that cannot reproduce individual personalities, yet demand and market value are rising rapidly, driven in part by celebrity customers.
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fromThe Verge
2 days ago

Starlink and Chinese satellites nearly collided last week

A newly deployed Chinese satellite approached within about 200 meters of a Starlink satellite after ephemeris were not shared, prompting avoidance actions.
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fromTESLARATI
2 days ago

SpaceX shades airline for seeking contract with Amazon's Starlink rival

Starlink leads airline in-flight internet adoption while American Airlines explores Amazon's Leo, prompting public criticism from SpaceX employees and Elon Musk.
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fromKqed
2 days ago

Pine Trees, Reindeers and Snowflakes: 5 Winter Wild Videos From Deep Look | KQED

Conifers, reindeer, and snowflakes employ seasonal physical mechanisms—pine cone seed protection and release, cyclical antler growth and shedding, and humidity- and temperature-driven crystal formation.
fromNature
2 days ago

Tracing pollution in the lives of Arctic seabirds

High up in the Arctic Circle, Olivier Chastel begins his working day by scanning the horizon for polar bears, rifle at the ready. "In 25 years I've never had to use it, but you can't be too careful," he explains. There can't be many conservationists who go birdwatching while armed, but the danger to life from bears in Svalbard - the largest island of the Norwegian polar archipelago - is so high that it's a legal requirement.
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fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Draw a Scientist

What I asked them to do was simple; I said, "Draw a scientist." I didn't give them any other directions. I didn't make up this experiment-researchers have been asking children of various ages to "Draw a scientist" for more than five decades. They don't do this because they are interested in children's art; instead, they are interested in how children think about scientists and, more specifically, whether they think of them as male or female.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

Heat Records, Mpox Mutations, Baby Health Risks and Hobbits

Kendra Pierre-Louis: For Scientific American's Science Quickly, I'm Kendra Pierre-Louis, in for Rachel Feltman. You're listening to our weekly science news roundup. First up, the European Union's Copernicus Climate Change Service reported last Monday that 2025 is shaping up to be the second-hottest year on record, with data suggesting it will tie with 2023 for runner-up status. To learn more about what this means, we are talking to Andrea Thompson, senior desk editor for life science here at Scientific American. Hi, Andrea.
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fromBig Think
2 days ago

Brightest-ever lensed supernova reveals astronomy's coming revolution

Multiply imaged, time-varying supernovae and gravitational lenses provide time delays that enable measurements of cosmic distances and the Universe's expansion rate.
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fromKqed
2 days ago

Monarch Butterflies Now Wear Tiny Tags - for Scientists to Track Them in Real Time | KQED

Ultralight solar Bluetooth radio tags enable real-time tracking of western monarchs, revealing habitat use, movement patterns, and sites critical for conservation and threat reduction.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

Watch These Hummingbirds Joust Like Medieval Knights

Male green hermit hummingbirds have straighter, sharper bills used both for specialized feeding and lethal jousting during lek mating contests.
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fromNature
3 days ago

Giving a voice to animals: Laos's national herpetologist on her day-to-day

Laos has a native herpetologist leading research, discovering four Tylototriton species, training biologists, and conducting field surveys to conserve amphibians and reptiles.
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fromFuturism
3 days ago

China Installs Defensive Countermeasures on Space Station

Chinese taikonauts installed debris-protection panels and inspected Tiangong after space-debris damage; China executed an emergency uncrewed flight to provide a new return vehicle.
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fromTheregister
3 days ago

SPhotonix 5D memory crystal: cold storage lasts 14B years

5D Memory Crystal encodes data via birefringent voxels in fused silica, enabling five-dimensional, ultra-durable, high-capacity archival storage.
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fromFuturism
3 days ago

Scientists Intrigued by Large Spider-Like Blob on Europa

Europa's spider-like surface features, such as Damhán Alla, likely form from water erupting through the ice and may indicate subsurface brine pools.
fromWIRED
3 days ago

How Do Astronomers Find Planets in Other Solar Systems?

Even the closest exoplanets are more than 4 light years away (36 trillion miles), which makes it doubtful that we'll ever visit one-so why bother? The reason is, it helps us answer an age-old question: Are we alone in the universe? As far as we understand, you need a planet to have life, and the race is on to locate one with Earth-like qualities.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Little Foot hominin fossil may be new species of human ancestor

Little Foot may represent a previously unknown Australopithecus species, distinct from A. africanus and A. prometheus, implying greater hominin diversity.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
4 days ago

Why Humanoid Robots Still Can't Survive in the Real World

General-purpose humanoid robots remain scarce because real-world physical complexity and the lack of embodied, experiential knowledge make robust, adaptive behavior extremely difficult.
fromBig Think
4 days ago

Starts With A Bang podcast #124 - Astrochemistry

They can directly collapse to a black hole, they can become core-collapse supernovae, they can be torn apart by tidal cataclysms, they can be subsumed by other, larger stars, or they can die gently, as our Sun will, by blowing off their outer layers in a planetary nebula while their cores contract down to form a degenerate white dwarf. All of the forms of stellar death help enrich the Universe, adding new atoms, isotopes, and even molecules to the interstellar medium:
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fromFuturism
4 days ago

Scientists Reveal Robot Small Enough to Travel Through Human Body

Researchers built a sub-millimeter microrobot integrating a computer, motor, and sensors that can sense, process information, and act autonomously.
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

New Study Shows "Teen" Brain Development Continues to Age 32

For decades, my colleagues and I advanced the premise that early substance use-nicotine, alcohol, or cannabis (or other addicting drugs)-interferes with critical maturation stages, particularly adolescence. Some questioned the science behind these premises, while others said it was propaganda from people disapproving of drugs like cannabis to justify their views. Despite this, clinicians often conveyed the cautionary: "The adolescent brain is still developing," or "Drugs hurt the teenage brain."
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