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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
9 minutes ago

China is reportedly testing a new airborne wind turbine

Researchers in China have reportedly tested a new, gravity-defying wind turbine system that they say could generate power from the airspace above cities. The turbine is called the S2000 Stratosphere Airborne Wind Energy System, or SAWES. Held up by what is essentially a helium blimp, the machine reportedly generated 385 kilowatts of electricity from 2,000 meters (more than 6,500 feet) above the city of Yibin in China's province of Sichuan, according to a recent Euronews report.
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fromwww.independent.co.uk
39 minutes ago

Scientists develop universal vaccine to protect against allergies, cold and flu

Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging. At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 hour ago

Simulations shed light on how snowman-shaped body in Kuiper belt may have formed

Gravitational collapse of rotating pebble clouds can produce double-lobed, snowman-like planetesimals like Arrokoth, explaining their shape and formation non-violently.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
9 minutes ago

Cats' cancer genes show striking similarity to humans'

Feline cancers share genetic drivers with human (and dog) cancers, enabling potential targeted treatments, improved diagnostics for cats, and translational insights for human oncology.
#bouba-kiki
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fromwww.dw.com
46 minutes ago

'Remarkable' new cat cancer genome could benefit humans

Cats and humans develop similar cancers due to shared tumor-causing genetic mutations, suggesting cats could improve cancer research and treatments for both species.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
9 minutes ago

Newly discovered horned dinosaur was like a unicorn from hell

Spinosaurus mirabilis, a newly identified 10–14 meter predator with a bladelike crest, hunted both on land and in shallow coastal waters millions of years ago.
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fromMail Online
4 hours ago

The moon is SHRINKING: Scientists spot 1,000 cracks on lunar surface

The Moon is contracting; new cracks across the lunar maria reveal ongoing shrinkage and potential seismic risks for future astronauts.
fromComputerWeekly.com
7 hours ago

Cisco, Qunnect claim quantum first with datacentre connectivity | Computer Weekly

Qunnect and Cisco have unveiled what they say is the first entanglement-swapping demonstration of its kind over deployed metro-scale fibre using a commercial quantum networking system. The demonstration combined Qunnect's room-temperature quantum hardware with Cisco's quantum networking software stack. The net result of the project is regarded by the partners as being able to bring practical quantum networks closer to scalable deployment, validating a spoke-and-hub model for scaling quantum networks through commercial datacentres.
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#energy
fromPsychology Today
4 hours ago
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How Brawn and Engineering-Not Brains-Led to Human Domination

Human control of diverse energy sources and exceptional physical engineering power enabled the rise of civilization but generated costs requiring a mindset shift toward balance with nature.
fromBig Think
3 days ago
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What are the most energy-efficient reactions in physics?

Different processes convert mass to energy with vastly different efficiencies: chemical reactions convert negligible mass, nuclear fission/fusion convert more, and antimatter annihilation converts mass completely.
fromTechzine Global
11 hours ago

Microsoft Silica stores data for 10,000 years in special kitchen glass

Microsoft has achieved a breakthrough with Project Silica. The technology for long-term data storage now works with borosilicate glass. This is the same material used for cookware and oven doors. The method can store data for up to 10,000 years. Long-term storage of digital information remains a challenge for data centers and archives. Magnetic tapes and hard drives degrade within a few decades, making them less suitable for storing data for future generations.
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fromComputerworld
7 hours ago

Data stored in glass could last over 10,000 years, Microsoft says

Borosilicate glass plates can store multi-terabyte data with femtosecond laser encoding and survive accelerated aging indicating potential 10,000-year retention as a durable archival medium.
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fromNature
20 hours ago

Science journalism on the ropes worldwide as US aid cuts bite

Cuts to philanthropic and government grants are reducing funding for cross-border investigative science journalism, threatening scrutiny of environmental and public-health issues.
#optical-data-storage
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fromBig Think
13 hours ago

The Big Bang's final and most difficult prediction: confirmed

The cosmic neutrino background has been detected and its observed properties agree with Big Bang predictions.
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fromwww.nature.com
20 hours ago

Host control of persistent EpsteinBarr virus infection

Host non-genetic factors (HIV, immunosuppression, smoking) and genetic variation at MHC/HLA strongly influence blood Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) load during persistent infection.
fromFast Company
11 hours ago

How hesitation is a fundamental brain feature, according to neuroscientists

At the Winter Olympics, skiers, bobsledders, speedskaters, and many other athletes all have to master one critical moment: when to start. That split second is paramount during competition because when everyone is strong and skilled, a moment of hesitation can separate gold from silver. A competitor who hesitates too much will be left behind -but moving too early will get them disqualified.
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fromBig Think
4 hours ago

Science fiction blinded us to the perils of settling Mars

Mars' surface is hostile: toxic soil, perchlorates, intense radiation, thin atmosphere, and micrometeorite risk make sustainable surface habitation extremely difficult without extensive underground protection.
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fromwww.npr.org
10 hours ago

How a recent shift in DNA sleuthing might help investigators in the Nancy Guthrie case

Investigators are using forensic investigative genetic genealogy and additional DNA methods to find a suspect and locate 84-year-old Nancy Guthrie after CODIS returned no matches.
fromFast Company
8 hours ago

These designers made a sustainable new building material from corn

This corn-based construction material was made by Manufactura, a Mexican sustainable materials company, and it imagines a second life for waste from the most widely produced grain in the world. The project started as an invitation by chef Jorge Armando, the founder of catering brand Taco Kween Berlin, to find ways he could reintegrate waste generated by his taqueria into architecture. A team led by designer Dinorah Schulte created corncretl during a residency last year in Massa Lombarda, Italy.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
4 hours ago

A pair of gut bacteria may cause constipation

Gut bacteria are crucial to ensuring healthy digestion and defecation. But two species of bacteria may also be the cause of constipation: according to a new study, Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron and Akkermansia muciniphila appear to work in concert to break down colonic mucin, the slimy coating in our colons that keeps our poo moving along. Too little mucin means a drier and more constipation-prone colon.
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fromNature
2 days ago

Daily briefing: The science influencers tackling misinformation online

A 300-million-year-old microsaur shows herbivorous dental adaptations, suggesting earlier vertebrate herbivory; the EU bars most Chinese organizations from Horizon Europe sensitive-technology projects.
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fromwww.nytimes.com
21 hours ago

Inside the Birthplace of Your Favorite Technology

Bell Labs' mid-20th-century innovations—transistor, information theory, satellites and software—laid the foundational technology used across modern computing, communications and AI.
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fromThe Atlantic
22 hours ago

Today's Atlantic Trivia: Name That College Town

Average measured human IQ has risen steadily over the past century (the Flynn effect), likely from education, nutrition, environmental changes, and increased cognitive stimulation.
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fromBig Think
1 day ago

We still don't understand human cell behavior. That's about to change.

AI-driven tools and new data are being used to decode cellular complexity and mutational patterns to better understand disease mechanisms and accelerate health research.
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fromBig Think
1 day ago

5 sci-fi books that foreshadowed the future of biology

Science-fiction foresaw biotechnologies like IVF and artificial wombs, and modern biotech now treats disease, restores abilities, and enables family-building.
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fromNature
1 day ago

Accurate predictions of disordered protein ensembles with STARLING - Nature

Intrinsically disordered regions require ensemble-based, experimentally integrated computational approaches to reveal sequence-encoded conformational biases and functional roles.
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fromenglish.elpais.com
1 day ago

EDEN: The AI system that learns from a million species to design new treatments

AI-trained evolutionary genetic models enable programmable gene editing to replace defective genetic codes and reprogram cells, enabling new therapies for cancer and hereditary diseases.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Scientists may have just solved one of the strangest mysteries of Greenland's ice sheet

Parts of Greenland's ice sheet undergo thermal convection, forming vast plume structures that indicate softer ice and potentially affect how the ice responds to warming.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

How AI-powered smart homes' could transform care for people with dementia

AI-powered smart-home technologies can monitor hazards and support people with Alzheimer's or dementia, improving safety while easing caregiver burdens.
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fromBig Think
1 day ago

How bioengineering will help save the planet

Advanced bioengineering has crossed an engineering threshold, turning biology into a scalable, improving technology that can advance health and global sustainability.
fromNews Center
1 day ago

HPV Cancer Vaccine Slows Tumor Growth, Extends Survival in Preclinical Model - News Center

After proving this concept across multiple studies, the team developed therapeutic cancer vaccines to tackle one of the most challenging targets yet - HPV-driven tumors. In a new study published in Science Advances, the scientists discovered that systematically changing the orientation and placement of a single cancer-targeting peptide can lead to formulations that supercharge the immune system's ability to attack tumors.
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fromNextgov.com
1 day ago

FAA launches competition to modernize aging IT portfolio

In an effort to transform this portfolio, the agency is launching a challenge to gather ideas from industry on how to move these old systems to cloud-native architectures and reduce its technical debt. According to a Tuesday notice on Sam.gov, the agency is forgoing a traditional acquisition in favor of a challenge-based approach. The multi-phase competition will allow the FAA to watch vendors perform, not just pitch.
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fromTheregister
1 day ago

DARPA's LongShot missile UAV edges toward flight tests

LongShot is an unmanned, air-launched X-68A experimental aircraft advancing toward flight testing to engage airborne threats without risking pilots.
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fromNature
1 day ago

Single-cell and isoform-specific translational profiling of the mouse brain - Nature

Ribo-STAMP constructs fuse APOBEC1 to ribosomal proteins and are cloned into inducible and AAV-compatible expression vectors for cellular and in vivo applications.
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fromThe Verge
1 day ago

Are Elon Musk's Mars plans finally coming back down to Earth?

Elon Musk and SpaceX shifted focus toward building a Moon city, triggering skepticism over feasibility and a mismatch with company Mars-related hiring.
fromBig Think
1 day ago

How to deter biothreats in the age of gene synthesis

The barriers to reading, writing, and editing DNA are falling fast. A scientist can now order synthetic gene sequences from manufacturers and have them within days - soon, it could be common to produce them right in the lab using a benchtop DNA synthesizer. High school students are learning CRISPR gene-editing techniques. Artificial intelligence (AI) platforms trained on biological data are accelerating experimentation and generating sequences that don't exist in nature.
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fromArs Technica
1 day ago

X-rays reveal kingfisher feather structure in unprecedented detail

Advanced imaging, spectroscopy, and museum specimen comparisons revealed kingfisher and duck feather nanostructures and mapped chemicals used in Qing dynasty tian-tsui screens.
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fromwww.independent.co.uk
1 day ago

UK scientist creates futuristic shoe which can prevent the elderly from falling over

A sensor-equipped prototype shoe captures lab-quality, real-time gait data to help elderly users maintain balance and potentially prevent dangerous falls.
fromBig Think
1 day ago

How reading books regulates your nervous system

There's a feeling I love almost more than anything: the feeling of sinking into a good book while the world around me fades away. My breathing slows, my shoulders drop, and the mental chatter in the back of my mind goes quiet. What's happening in those moments goes far deeper than entertainment or education, and we seem to sense this instinctively.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Stone, parchment or laser-written glass? Scientists find new way to preserve data

Laser-writing in glass encodes data as voxels, enabling high-density, durable storage that can preserve terabytes for millennia.
fromBig Think
1 day ago

Athletes keep breaking records - and they may never stop

When horse racing fans rhapsodize about Secretariat's enormous heart, they're not speaking metaphorically - a postmortem exam in 1989 found that it weighed between 21 and 22 pounds, two-and-a-half times more than the average thoroughbred's heart. The legendary horse also had a perfectly proportioned bone structure, flawless biomechanics, and a seemingly innate hunger for the finish line.
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fromBig Think
1 day ago

Snouters, dinosauroids, and other animals that never were

Rhinogradentia are an elaborate 1957 zoological hoax describing fictional mammals with diverse nasal adaptations, later embraced as a classic of speculative evolution.
fromNature
1 day ago

This giant virus hijacks cells' protein-making machinery to multiply wildly

Scientists report that a type of giant virus multiplies furiously by hijacking its host's protein-making machinery - long-sought experimental evidence that viruses can co-opt a system typically associated with cellular life. The researchers found that the virus makes a complex of three proteins that takes over its host's protein-production system, which then churns out viral proteins instead of the host's own. Virologists had already suspected that viruses could perform such a feat, says Frederik Schulz, a computational biologist at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in California, who was not involved with the work.
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fromBig Think
1 day ago

Metabolism, not cells or genetics, may have begun life on Earth

Life is ubiquitous on Earth, diverse across environments, and likely originated via a metabolism-first scenario despite unresolved origins.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

FDA agrees to review Moderna mRNA flu vaccine in dramatic reversal

The FDA will review Moderna's amended application for an mRNA influenza vaccine after initially rejecting it due to insufficient clinical data.
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fromBig Think
1 day ago

5 sci-fi aliens - and the likelihood they could actually exist

Life elsewhere could be radically different from humans despite Earth organisms sharing DNA-based biochemistry; planetary conditions and chemistry can produce a vast diversity of life.
fromNature
1 day ago

Deepest-ever rock core extracted from under Antarctic ice sheet

Preliminary dating, based on the presence of fossilized algae that only existed during specific geological periods, suggests that the core represents an archive of the past 23 million years. This includes periods when Earth's average surface temperature was hotter than today's - and higher than the temperature projected for 2100 under current global climate policies. The core was retrieved as part of the Sensitivity of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet to 2 °C (SWAIS2C) project.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

You don't need to try ski mountaineering to benefit from improving your VO2 max

Exceptional VO max underlies elite ski mountaineering performance and indicates superior cardiorespiratory fitness affecting both athletes and regular people.
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fromNature
1 day ago

Stereospecific alkyl-alkyl cross-coupling of boronic esters - Nature

Copper-acetylide-catalyzed stereospecific C(sp3)-C(sp3) coupling converts enantioenriched boronic esters into complex frameworks while tolerating boron 'ate' complexes and common functional groups.
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fromwww.npr.org
1 day ago

Surprise shark caught on camera for first time in Antarctica's near-freezing deep

A 3–4 meter sleeper shark was filmed 490 meters deep inside the Antarctic (Southern) Ocean, overturning assumptions that sharks do not occur that far south.
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fromABC7 Los Angeles
1 day ago

Surprise shark caught on camera for first time in Antarctica's near-freezing deep

A 3–4 meter sleeper shark was filmed at 490 meters depth in Antarctic waters previously thought to lack sharks.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
22 hours ago

Elusive sleeper shark seen off Antarctica in a first

A southern sleeper shark was recorded farther south than ever before off the South Shetland Islands at about 490 meters, showing sharks inhabit Antarctic deep waters.
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fromThe New Yorker
1 day ago

Why Some People Thrive on Four Hours of Sleep

Natural short sleepers—under one per cent of the population—need far less sleep without apparent health consequences and may carry genetic variations linked to short sleep.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

This fossilized vomit is older than the dinosaurs

Fossils are remarkable for their ability to viscerally connect us with long-lost life. The bulk of a Tyrannosaurus rex skull, the biting point of a shark tooth, the startling familiarity of a hominin footprintand then there's the charm inherent to any sample of regurgitalite, the paleontological term for fossilized vomit. Okay, charm might be a stretch, but to the right scientist, the rare finds are little treasures, says Arnaud Rebillard, a Ph.D. candidate in paleontology at the Natural History Museum of Berlin.
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fromNature
1 day ago

Reduced cyclin D3 expression in erythroid cells protects against malaria - Nature

A long history of studies in human genetics has investigated how the powerful evolutionary pressure of endemic malaria has resulted in the selection of genetic variants that moderate the effect of the disease. In 1948, J. B. S. Haldane first suggested that heterozygous carriers of alleles that confer β-thalassaemia, a life-threatening anaemia at that time, could reduce mortality during malaria infection, and this 'heterozygote advantage' might explain the increased frequency
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Doting male mouse dads share a genetic signature, new study finds

Higher Agouti gene expression in male African striped mice associates with increased aggression and reduced pup caregiving, with social environment influencing expression.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Plantwatch: oldest known seed plants heat up for sex to attract pollinating insects

Cycads heat their reproductive cones to attract species-specific beetle pollinators using infrared-tuned antennae, with male cones warming earlier to ensure pollen transfer.
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fromFortune
2 days ago

D-Wave CEO shrugs off short attacks with 'revolutionary' $550 million quantum computing acquisition | Fortune

Four publicly traded quantum computing companies faced activist short-seller attacks despite billion-dollar market caps and modest operational revenues.
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fromAxios
2 days ago

The narrow slice of data that worries biosecurity experts

Certain biological datasets that materially increase misuse risk should be governed like sensitive health records while most biological data remains openly accessible.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

NASA sets a date for redo of key Artemis II test

NASA will rehearse fueling and launch countdown for Artemis II on Feb 19 after replacing a ground-equipment filter to address hydrogen leaks and valve malfunctions.
fromNature
2 days ago

The science influencers going viral on TikTok to fight misinformation

One of Simon Clark's most popular TikTok videos begins with him playing the part of a clueless climate contrarian. Adopting the overconfident tone that is common among social-media influencers, he proclaims: "Renewables are a scam!" Cut to the real Clark, who has a PhD in stratospheric dynamics and uses the handle @simonoxfphys, as he dismantles several myths about renewable energy using a deadpan style and a torrent of charts. The video, with almost 180,000 views, is an effort to fight misinformation by meeting people where they are, he says.
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fromSilicon Canals
2 days ago

Nuclera and leadXpro Partner to Accelerate Structure-Based Drug Design for Complex Membrane Proteins - Silicon Canals

An AI-guided end-to-end workflow combining Nuclera's eProtein Discovery and leadXpro's AI/ML will accelerate and de-risk structural and biophysical access to challenging membrane protein targets.
fromMail Online
2 days ago

Scientists reveal secret behind the perfect pancake toss

'To get it to flip, linear force isn't enough,' one of their researchers said. 'We need a pivot point. 'For the pancake to flip, it must rotate. This comes from torque, which happens when the pan pushing slightly off the pancake's centre of mass, giving it angular acceleration.'
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fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

The (Perhaps) Unsolvable Mysteries of Consciousness

Consciousness remains unresolved: neuroscience has advanced many insights, but the subjective 'hard problem' linking brain activity to experience still eludes explanation.
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fromArs Technica
2 days ago

Which countries are actually serious about developing their own rockets?

Several US allies are funding domestic commercial launch industries to secure sovereign access to space as a national security and strategic priority.
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fromwww.nature.com
2 days ago

Publisher Correction: Psychedelics elicit their effects by 5-HT2A receptor-mediated Gi signalling

Misformatted superscript residue labels and a truncated alkane-chain sentence in 5-HT2AR Gi- and Gq-biased signalling descriptions were corrected.
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fromMail Online
3 days ago

NASA admits 1000s of 'city killer' asteroids still haven't been found

Tens of thousands of undetected near-Earth asteroids at least 140 metres wide remain, and Earth currently lacks a ready spacecraft capability to actively deflect them.
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fromMail Online
3 days ago

Children of Chernobyl workers have mutations in their DNA, study finds

Children of Chernobyl cleanup workers exhibit increased clustered de novo DNA mutations linked to parental radiation exposure.
fromNature
2 days ago

Nanoscience is latest discipline to embrace large-scale replication efforts

Calling nanoscientists: your field needs you to try to replicate a landmark finding that quantum dots can act as biosensors inside living cells. As part of the first large-scale effort in the physical sciences to tackle the reproducibility crisis, researchers in France and the Netherlands are offering funds and resources in exchange for a few months of work. "We are trying to use
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

First solar eclipse of 2026 blazes a ring of fire' above Antarctica

A ring-of-fire annular solar eclipse occurred Feb 17, 2026, visible across parts of Antarctica, Africa, and South America; full ring seen only in Antarctica.
fromThe Washington Post
2 days ago

Why your most creative ideas may come after a night of sleep

Neuroscientist Karen Konkoly is a lucid dreamer. When she's asleep and immersed in a dream, she knows that she is, in fact, dreaming. One of her favorite things to do during these sleep sojourns is pose personal, even existential questions - probing the mysterious terrain of her own subconscious mind. Asa researcher who studies the human mind, Konkoly has read many scientific papers positing different explanations for why humans dream - and she's made it her mission to rigorously test them.
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fromwww.npr.org
5 days ago

What monogamy in the animal world tells us about ourselves

Monogamy varies widely among mammals; humans rank relatively high, while species such as beavers and Ethiopian wolves exhibit stronger pair-bonding.
fromMail Online
2 days ago

Antarctica has a 'gravity hole' where sea levels are 420ft lower

The vast gravity hole, known as the Antarctic Geoid Low (AGL), is the product of incredibly slow rock movements, according to the experts. Starting 70 million years ago - a time while dinosaurs still roamed the Earth - less-dense rock built up beneath the frozen continent and weakened the pull of gravity. The gravity hole started small before rapidly growing in strength between 50 and 30 million years ago - creating the strange ocean dip that we see today.
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fromTheregister
2 days ago

Sound cues steered dreams and improved puzzle-solving

Timed sound cues during sleep (targeted memory reactivation) can prompt dream content and double next-morning puzzle-solving rates for some participants.
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

The Hidden Lives of Lab Animals and the Need for Reform

Countless millions of nonhuman animals (animals) of all sorts are used in a diverse array of laboratory research. Their treatment varies from being unspeakably inhumanely abused to being treated with kindness, depending on the questions at hand and the values and attitudes of the researchers themselves. The lives of these animals truly are hidden, and most people are incredulous when they learn that laboratory rats and mice still are not considered "animals" under the current federal Animal Welfare Act.
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fromPadailypost
1 day ago

Arthur H. Hausman

Arthur Herbert Hausman (1923–2026) was a cryptologist, engineer, and executive whose innovations in cryptography, electronics, and broadcasting advanced national security and global media.
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fromNature
1 week ago

A Yangtze without fishers - but not without fish

A fishing moratorium on the Yangtze River doubled fish biomass and increased species richness by 13% within five years.
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fromMail Online
2 days ago

'Ring of Fire' Solar Eclipse today - but only 100 people will see it

Annular 'Ring of Fire' eclipse will be total only over remote Antarctic stations, with a partial eclipse visible across parts of the Southern Hemisphere.
fromNature
2 days ago

Student dilemma: physical science or physical education?

Practical physics classes were competing with the allure of sports in the 1800s, and top tips for the best-smelling garden, in this week's peek at the Nature archives. 100 years ago doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/d41586-026-00297-2 This article features text from Nature's archive. By its historical nature, the archive includes some images, articles and language that by twenty-first-century standards are offensive and harmful. Find out more.
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fromNature
2 days ago

Brain differences between sexes get more pronounced from puberty

Researchers studying brain-imaging data from people aged between 8 and 100 found that sex differences in the brain's connections are minimal in early life, but then increase drastically at puberty; some of these differences continue to grow throughout adult life. The study was published as a preprint on bioRxiv, and has not yet been peer reviewed. The work could help us to understand why men and women have different likelihoods of developing some mental-health disorders - and perhaps give insight into treating them, say the researchers.
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fromArs Technica
2 days ago

Scientists hunting mammoth fossils found whales 400 km inland

At first glance, it looked like Wooller and his colleagues might have found evidence that mammoths lived in central Alaska just 2,000 years ago. But ancient DNA revealed that two "mammoth" bones actually belonged to a North Pacific right whale and a minke whale-which raised a whole new set of questions. The team's hunt for Alaska's last mammoth had turned into an epic case of mistaken identity, starring two whale species and a mid-century fossil hunter.
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fromBig Think
2 days ago

The biggest overlooked problem in the hunt for alien Earths

In all the known Universe, at least as of 2026, the only world known to support life is planet Earth. Despite all we've learned about the Universe, including: the vast abundance of exoplanets, including rocky exoplanets with Earth-like temperatures, the ubiquity of heavy elements, the commonness of organic molecules that are known precursors to life, and the long cosmic timescales over which stars with such planets form, there are no known examples of worlds, other than our own, where life processes or definitive biosignatures have been detected.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

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

Any object or concept can be represented as a form, a topological surface, and consequently any process can be regarded as a transition from one form to another. If the transition is smooth and continuous, there are well-established mathematical methods for describing it. In nature, however, the evolution of forms usually involves abrupt changes and perplexing divergences, or transformations. Because these transformations represent sudden disruptions of otherwise continuous processes, Rene Thom of the Institut des Hautes Etudes Scientifiques in France termed them elementary catastrophes.
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fromianVisits
2 days ago

Star Trek beams into the Science Museum with films, props and late-night events

The Science Museum is boldly going where no science museum has (probably) gone before, opening a season of Star Trek events that beam sci-fi imagination straight into the realm of real science. To mark Star Trek's 60th anniversary, the Science Museum will launch several months of events with a late-evening opening of the museum for adults next month. The museum late takes place on Thursday 26th March, and will feature a range of Star Trek themed events throughout the evening.
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fromMail Online
2 days ago

Prehistoric killer superbug discovered in 5,000-year-old ice

An ancient Psychrobacter strain from Scarisoara Ice Cave, frozen about 5,000 years, is resistant to ten modern antibiotics and harbors over 100 resistance genes.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Loaded' water is hyped as a secret to hydration. But adding electrolytes is merely time down the drain | Antiviral

Electrolyte-enhanced waters are unnecessary for most people; plain water suffices and excessive salt intake can harm blood pressure.
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fromInsideHook
2 days ago

Y Chromosome Loss May Impact Men More Than Previously Thought

Loss of the Y chromosome in men increases with age and is linked to heart disease, Alzheimer's, kidney disease and higher COVID-19 mortality.
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fromenglish.elpais.com
2 days ago

A bacterium frozen 5,000 years ago has been found capable of standing up to super-pathogens

A 5,000-year-old Psychrobacter strain recovered from Romanian cave ice displays resistance to multiple modern antibiotics and produces compounds that inhibit other, hard-to-treat pathogens.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

These jaw-dropping photographs show a new Triassic Park' of dinosaur prints in the Italian Alps

An exceptionally rich Triassic dinosaur tracksite with about 2,000 well-preserved prints was discovered on vertical rock faces in the Fraele Valley, Italian Alps.
fromKqed
2 days ago

What an Insect View Really Looks Like | KQED

On a spring day in 1694, Antonie van Leeuwenhoek - the father of microbiology - used a magnifying lens to look at a candle through the dissected eye of a dragonfly. But instead of seeing 1 candle flame, he saw hundreds of tiny flames, repeated over and over. But spoiler alert - this is not how insects see. Hi, I'm Niba, and today we're going to explore how insects really see the world.
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fromNature
6 days ago

Daily briefing: Exercise rewires the brain for endurance, in mice

Repeated exercise sessions rewire the brain, making neurons faster to activate and enabling improved running endurance.
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fromArs Technica
3 days ago

A fluid can store solar energy and then release it as heat months later

Molecular solar thermal storage uses sunlight-driven isomerization to trap energy in chemical bonds for on-demand heat release, enabling long-duration solar heat storage.
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