OMG science

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#near-earth-objects
OMG science
fromJezebel
1 hour ago

A City-Killing Asteroid Will Narrowly Miss the Earth Today. We Discovered It Only a Week Ago.

Near-Earth object 2026JH2 will pass Earth extremely closely with limited discovery time, showing smaller impacts may be detected too late for effective action.
OMG science
fromWIRED
2 days ago

Asteroid 2026 JH2 Is About to Fly Right Past Earth-Relatively Speaking

Asteroid 2026 JH2 will pass closest to Earth on May 18 at about 57,000 miles, and can be observed via telescope or live broadcast.
OMG science
fromwww.dw.com
1 year ago

Asteroid 2026 JH2 no need to worry about it hitting Earth

Most near-Earth objects pass close to Earth without impact, and large impacts are extremely rare despite frequent small arrivals.
OMG science
fromJezebel
1 hour ago

A City-Killing Asteroid Will Narrowly Miss the Earth Today. We Discovered It Only a Week Ago.

Near-Earth object 2026JH2 will pass Earth extremely closely with limited discovery time, showing smaller impacts may be detected too late for effective action.
OMG science
fromWIRED
2 days ago

Asteroid 2026 JH2 Is About to Fly Right Past Earth-Relatively Speaking

Asteroid 2026 JH2 will pass closest to Earth on May 18 at about 57,000 miles, and can be observed via telescope or live broadcast.
OMG science
fromwww.dw.com
1 year ago

Asteroid 2026 JH2 no need to worry about it hitting Earth

Most near-Earth objects pass close to Earth without impact, and large impacts are extremely rare despite frequent small arrivals.
OMG science
fromGameSpot
2 hours ago

How To Unlock All Biomod Upgrades In Subnautica 2

Biomods in Subnautica 2 provide active and passive character upgrades, unlocked via creature scanning and equipped through Biolabs.
#el-nino
fromNature
3 days ago
OMG science

Daily briefing: Are we about to face a 'super' El Nino?

El Niño strength remains uncertain, nearly half of lab-mouse strains are genetically misidentified, and new evidence supports PSA testing reducing prostate-cancer deaths.
fromFuturism
4 days ago
OMG science

Last Time an El Nino Was This Bad, It Killed 50 Million People

A severe El Niño is likely, with major ocean warming that could trigger droughts, floods, and global food-supply disruption.
OMG science
fromNature
3 days ago

Daily briefing: Are we about to face a 'super' El Nino?

El Niño strength remains uncertain, nearly half of lab-mouse strains are genetically misidentified, and new evidence supports PSA testing reducing prostate-cancer deaths.
OMG science
fromFuturism
4 days ago

Last Time an El Nino Was This Bad, It Killed 50 Million People

A severe El Niño is likely, with major ocean warming that could trigger droughts, floods, and global food-supply disruption.
OMG science
fromMail Online
13 hours ago

Dark matter may have been detected by accident seven YEARS ago

Dark matter may leave detectable imprints in gravitational waves from black hole collisions, with a possible hint found in a 2019 event.
fromMail Online
13 hours ago

Huge asteroid will skim past Earth TONIGHT - here's how you can watch

Astronomers say the space rock, called 2026 JH2, is up to four times the size of a London bus and will get 'as close as you can without hitting'. It is expected to zoom by our planet at an estimated distance of around 56,000 miles (90,000km) at 10:23pm BST. This is exceptionally close - the equivalent of just a quarter of the distance between us and the moon.
OMG science
#near-earth-asteroids
OMG science
fromMail Online
4 days ago

Huge asteroid with potential to obliterate CITY will just miss Earth

Asteroid 2026 JH2 will pass extremely close to Earth next week, with no impact expected for at least 100 years.
OMG science
fromMail Online
4 days ago

Huge asteroid with potential to obliterate CITY will just miss Earth

Asteroid 2026 JH2 will pass extremely close to Earth next week, with no impact expected for at least 100 years.
fromMail Online
10 hours ago

Mystery of the Mary Celeste 'ghost ship' is SOLVED

One thing that has always been suspicious to us as chemists is that their only cargo was almost pure ethanol. In fact, the Mary Celeste was filled with over 1,700 barrels of pure alcohol, but when investigators came on board, nine of these barrels were mysteriously empty. Scientists think that up to 1,100 litres of ethanol leaked into the hold and vaporised, creating the perfect conditions for a terrifying fireball.
OMG science
OMG science
fromwww.mediaite.com
12 hours ago

Trump Posts Bonkers Image of Himself Firing Missiles at Earth From Space

AI-generated Space Force images show Trump in space operating weapons, while the U.S. pursues missile interception, satellite defense, and plans for a lunar base.
#astronomy
OMG science
fromMail Online
1 day ago

Scientists baffled by mysterious blue flashes coming from deep space

Luminous Fast Blue Optical Transients are rare, extremely hot, fast blue flashes possibly caused by black hole or neutron star collisions with Wolf-Rayet stars.
fromFast Company
5 days ago
OMG science

A 'cosmic triangle' will appear in the sky tonight: When and where to see Saturn, Mars, and the moon align in May 2026

OMG science
fromMail Online
1 day ago

Scientists baffled by mysterious blue flashes coming from deep space

Luminous Fast Blue Optical Transients are rare, extremely hot, fast blue flashes possibly caused by black hole or neutron star collisions with Wolf-Rayet stars.
fromFast Company
5 days ago
OMG science

A 'cosmic triangle' will appear in the sky tonight: When and where to see Saturn, Mars, and the moon align in May 2026

fromWIRED
1 day ago

The First Atomic Bomb Test in 1945 Created an Entirely New Material

During the Trinity nuclear test on July 16, 1945, in the New Mexico desert—the world’s very first test of an atomic bomb—a new material spontaneously formed. It was discovered only recently, by an international research team coordinated by geologist Luca Bindi at the University of Florence, which identified the novel clathrate based on calcium, copper, and silicon. It’s a material never before observed either in nature or as an artificial compound created in the laboratory.
OMG science
#ufos
OMG science
fromLondon Business News | Londonlovesbusiness.com
1 day ago

Ex-CIA-linked researcher claims US recovered UFOs with multiple forms of alien life - London Business News | Londonlovesbusiness.com

Recovered unidentified aerial object wreckage may have contained multiple forms of extraterrestrial life, though no physical evidence has been presented to support the claims.
OMG science
fromThe Atlantic
1 week ago

Just Show Us the Spaceships Already

Released materials provide mostly low-quality images and unverified accounts without hard scientific evidence of extraterrestrial life.
OMG science
fromLondon Business News | Londonlovesbusiness.com
1 day ago

Ex-CIA-linked researcher claims US recovered UFOs with multiple forms of alien life - London Business News | Londonlovesbusiness.com

Recovered unidentified aerial object wreckage may have contained multiple forms of extraterrestrial life, though no physical evidence has been presented to support the claims.
OMG science
fromThe Atlantic
1 week ago

Just Show Us the Spaceships Already

Released materials provide mostly low-quality images and unverified accounts without hard scientific evidence of extraterrestrial life.
OMG science
fromwww.nature.com
1 day ago

Did Homo erectus and Denisovans mate? Tooth proteins hint at ancient trysts

Ancient protein analysis from 400,000-year-old Homo erectus teeth in China provides genetic evidence of interbreeding with Denisovans.
OMG science
fromMail Online
2 days ago

Scientist reveals how first contact will look like amid UFO disclosure

The universe likely teems with extraterrestrial life, and universal science and math would be key for first contact.
OMG science
fromFuturism
2 days ago

NASA Satellite Images Show Huge Colored Plumes Staining the Ocean

NASA satellites detect green, turquoise, and brown coastal plumes off the Mid-Atlantic coast, likely driven by phytoplankton blooms mixed with sediments and river outflows.
OMG science
fromFuturism
2 days ago

Scientists Detect Weird Anomalies in Clouds of Venus

A giant Venus cloud wave observed by Akatsuki was caused by the largest known hydraulic jump in the solar system, triggered by lower-cloud turbulence.
OMG science
fromFuturism
2 days ago

Scientists Scan Gruesome Crystal Formed by Nuclear Blast, Find Something Bizarre

A CT and X-ray study found a previously unobserved clathrate crystal in a rare red trinitite variant from the 1945 Trinity nuclear test.
OMG science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

Scientists catalog the fractal dimensions' of more than 130,000 islands

Coastlines show fractal behavior that varies by geometric feature, with coastline fractal dimension lower than other island measures.
#cosmology
OMG science
fromFuturism
3 days ago

Someone Asked Physicists What They Really Believe About the Universe and... Yikes

A large physics survey found major disagreement among experts about key cosmology ideas, with little alignment on inflation, string theory, dark matter, and dark energy.
OMG science
fromBig Think
3 days ago

Ask Ethan: Is the Universe the same age everywhere?

Light from distant sources reaches observers after long travel times, so the Universe’s apparent age depends on the observer’s location and frame of reference.
OMG science
fromFuturism
3 days ago

Someone Asked Physicists What They Really Believe About the Universe and... Yikes

A large physics survey found major disagreement among experts about key cosmology ideas, with little alignment on inflation, string theory, dark matter, and dark energy.
OMG science
fromBig Think
3 days ago

Ask Ethan: Is the Universe the same age everywhere?

Light from distant sources reaches observers after long travel times, so the Universe’s apparent age depends on the observer’s location and frame of reference.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 days ago

Microbe cities' may solve a key ocean mystery

When marine snow made of dead plankton's shells, fish poop, dust particles, and other debris descends to the ocean floor, it carries atmospheric carbon the plankton used to make their calcite shells. It's one of the ways the ocean stores carbon, helping to keep greenhouse gases from turning the planet into an oversize toaster oven. Yet scientists realized that something has been dissolving those calcite shells and releasing carbon dioxide, reducing the ocean's carbon-trapping capacity.
OMG science
OMG science
fromMail Online
3 days ago

Scientists issue urgent warning about drinking TEA

First boil in new plastic kettles can release millions of nanoparticles per millilitre into tea, with health impacts still unclear.
OMG science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 days ago

To celebrate Endangered Species Day, meet the scaly-foot snail, the most metal animal in the world

Scaly-foot snails convert vent sulfur into iron-rich shells and rely on symbiotic bacteria, but deep-sea mining threatens their hydrothermal habitat.
#neanderthals
OMG science
fromDefector
3 days ago

Would You Want This Guy As Your Dentist? | Defector

A Neanderthal molar with a deep cavity may indicate an early dental procedure, though some experts argue it could be natural wear or toothpicking.
OMG science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
5 days ago

59,000-year-old Neanderthal tooth may be oldest evidence of dentistry

Neanderthals may have intentionally drilled a tooth about 60,000 years ago, providing the earliest evidence of dental work and possible cognitive complexity.
OMG science
fromArs Technica
5 days ago

Neanderthals drilled cavities to treat a toothache 59,000 years ago

A 59,000-year-old Neanderthal tooth shows intentional drilling to remove infected tissue and relieve pain, providing the oldest evidence of dentistry.
OMG science
fromDefector
3 days ago

Would You Want This Guy As Your Dentist? | Defector

A Neanderthal molar with a deep cavity may indicate an early dental procedure, though some experts argue it could be natural wear or toothpicking.
OMG science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
5 days ago

59,000-year-old Neanderthal tooth may be oldest evidence of dentistry

Neanderthals may have intentionally drilled a tooth about 60,000 years ago, providing the earliest evidence of dental work and possible cognitive complexity.
OMG science
fromArs Technica
5 days ago

Neanderthals drilled cavities to treat a toothache 59,000 years ago

A 59,000-year-old Neanderthal tooth shows intentional drilling to remove infected tissue and relieve pain, providing the oldest evidence of dentistry.
#subnautica-2
OMG science
fromGameSpot
3 days ago

How To Activate The Alien Door And Alien Turbine In Subnautica 2

The alien observatory door requires massive power and language adaptation, achieved by tracing purple tendrils to destroy Bloom Cankers using a Feedback Resonator.
OMG science
fromGameSpot
3 days ago

How To Activate The Alien Door And Alien Turbine In Subnautica 2

The alien observatory door requires massive power and language adaptation, achieved by tracing purple tendrils to destroy Bloom Cankers using a Feedback Resonator.
fromNature
3 days ago

Genetic survey exposes flaws in widely used mouse models

Half of laboratory mice are not what scientists think they are, a genetic analysis of hundreds of strains that are distributed globally for animal research has found. The study, published today in Science, uncovered widespread inconsistencies between the reported names of mouse strains and their actual genetic makeup. The mismatches have the potential to compromise the reproducibility of mouse studies and undermine research conclusions, scientists say.
OMG science
OMG science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 days ago

A real Mr. Snuffleupagus? Meet the ocean's strangest new fish species

A new ghost pipefish species, Solenostomus snuffleupagus, was confirmed after years of searching and is known for striking red, hairy camouflage.
OMG science
fromNature
3 days ago

US biology lab locked down for more than a week amid smuggling inquiry

IU Bloomington biologists were locked out after the university changed locks, with access restored for some labs while many remain unable to reach equipment and reagents.
#dinosaur-paleontology
#exoplanets
fromMail Online
4 days ago
OMG science

Discovery of 10,000 alien worlds rewrites understanding of the cosmos

AI analysis of TESS data found 10,000+ new exoplanet candidates, including super-Earths, implying planets may be far more common than previously thought.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 week ago
OMG science

This sulfurous hell world might change the way we classify exoplanets

L 98-59 d appears to be a molten, sulfur-rich exoplanet with a rotten-egg smell, forming a potentially new planetary class.
OMG science
fromMail Online
4 days ago

Discovery of 10,000 alien worlds rewrites understanding of the cosmos

AI analysis of TESS data found 10,000+ new exoplanet candidates, including super-Earths, implying planets may be far more common than previously thought.
#climate-science
fromNature
5 days ago
OMG science

Daily briefing: Ice core is the longest-ever continuous record of Earth's climate

A 2.8-kilometre ice core provides a 1.2-million-year climate record linking carbon dioxide and temperature, while physicists remain divided on major cosmology questions.
fromwww.nature.com
1 week ago
OMG science

Top climate research center at risk of cuts sues Trump administration

NCAR faces potential dismantling as NSF and UCAR dispute authority and speed of transferring NCAR assets, threatening global climate science infrastructure and expertise.
OMG science
fromNature
5 days ago

Daily briefing: Ice core is the longest-ever continuous record of Earth's climate

A 2.8-kilometre ice core provides a 1.2-million-year climate record linking carbon dioxide and temperature, while physicists remain divided on major cosmology questions.
OMG science
fromwww.nature.com
1 week ago

Top climate research center at risk of cuts sues Trump administration

NCAR faces potential dismantling as NSF and UCAR dispute authority and speed of transferring NCAR assets, threatening global climate science infrastructure and expertise.
OMG science
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

Five Ways to Combat Evolutionary Mismatch

Evolutionary mismatch arises when modern environments differ from ancestral conditions, and five practical actions can reduce its harmful physical and mental effects.
OMG science
fromArtforum
4 days ago

Anicka Yi on Message from the Mud, her soil science project for Storm King

Prehistoric biofiction uses Winogradsky columns of regional mud, nutrients, and heat to grow microbes and algae, framed as deep-time archaeology outdoors.
OMG science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
4 days ago

Deep-Earth diamonds are revealing a trove of never-before-seen minerals

Powerful lasers and X-rays reveal new deep-Earth minerals trapped in diamonds, preserving crystal structures and improving models of element storage and rock transformation.
OMG science
fromMail Online
4 days ago

Chilling 'alien' message to humanity revealed in latest UFO files

FBI records claim Detroit Flying Saucer Club members received extraterrestrial messages warning humanity and describing humans as inferior, with saucers portrayed as friendly to the US.
OMG science
fromwww.dw.com
4 days ago

Lab-grown Tyrannosaurus leather: More chicken than dinosaur?

A handbag made with lab-grown T. rex leather will be auctioned in Paris, using material developed from disputed dinosaur soft-tissue findings.
OMG science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
4 days ago

Earth's next quantum revolution might depend on strip-mining the moon

Helium-3 is scarce on Earth but may be abundant on the Moon, enabling high-value uses and potentially a multitrillion-dollar lunar mining industry.
fromenglish.elpais.com
5 days ago

Protein reveals the oldest episode of sex and procreation among human species

Researchers in China have analysed proteins from the tooth enamel of six fossils dating back around 400,000 years five men and one woman found at sites across much of the country from north to south. They were able to recover two proteins, and one of them the M273V variant of the enamel protein ameloblastin is key. The results show that this protein is present in all the fossils analyzed, which belonged to our ancestor Homo erectus.
OMG science
OMG science
fromenglish.elpais.com
5 days ago

The Golden Dome': What we know about Trump's trillion-dollar defense project

A space-based missile defense system called Golden Dome faces major feasibility and cost doubts, with projected expenses far exceeding initial promises.
OMG science
fromwww.7x7.com
5 days ago

A woman-led team of SF researchers created a blueprint for coral regenerationand you can see the results.

Coral Regeneration Lab at the California Academy of Sciences uses Bay Area expertise to support coral reproduction and help restore imperiled reefs worldwide.
#james-webb-space-telescope
OMG science
fromArs Technica
5 days ago

Gravitational lens shows a galaxy just 800 million years post-Big Bang

A gravitationally lensed ultra-faint galaxy 800 million years after the Big Bang shows extremely primitive chemical composition from early supernova enrichment.
OMG science
fromEngadget
6 days ago

Astronomers use the Webb telescope to improve our map of the cosmic web - Engadget

A James Webb Space Telescope survey produced the most detailed map of the cosmic web, revealing its structure early in the universe and enabling galaxy evolution studies across cosmic time.
OMG science
fromArs Technica
5 days ago

Gravitational lens shows a galaxy just 800 million years post-Big Bang

A gravitationally lensed ultra-faint galaxy 800 million years after the Big Bang shows extremely primitive chemical composition from early supernova enrichment.
OMG science
fromEngadget
6 days ago

Astronomers use the Webb telescope to improve our map of the cosmic web - Engadget

A James Webb Space Telescope survey produced the most detailed map of the cosmic web, revealing its structure early in the universe and enabling galaxy evolution studies across cosmic time.
OMG science
fromMail Online
6 days ago

Scientists solve Bermuda mystery after discovering hidden structure

A lighter, 12-mile-thick rock slab beneath Bermuda formed 30–35 million years ago and keeps the island elevated above the ocean floor.
OMG science
fromFuturism
5 days ago

New Wikipedia Clone Made Entirely of AI Hallucinations

Halupedia generates encyclopedia entries on demand using AI prompts, presenting fabricated facts, citations, and footnotes in a scholarly style.
OMG science
fromArs Technica
5 days ago

Protein in Homo erectus teeth suggests Denisovans gave us some of their DNA

Ancient tooth proteins indicate Homo erectus interbred with Denisovans, and modern humans inherited some Homo erectus DNA.
fromwww.businessinsider.com
5 days ago

I grew up in the Midwest as a Korean adoptee. Living in Seoul helped me finally feel Korean and American.

I ended up printing out a picture of an Irish friendship ring. Even while I was presenting it, it just felt like a total lie because I had no connection to it. I just wanted the assignment to be over. She managed to meet her family on a three-day layover in South Korea, on the way back to the US from Guam on a research trip.
OMG science
fromOpen Culture
5 days ago

Watch the Moment When the Wreck of the Titanic Was First Discovered (1985)

Somebody should get Bob," says one of the crew as soon as it becomes clear, even on their low-resolution black-and-white monitor, that they're looking at man-made objects on the sea floor. And well they should have: the Bob in question is oceanographer and Argo inventor Robert Ballard, who'd been actively thinking about how to find the Titanic since at least the early nineteen-seventies and boarded Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute's R/V Knorr with intent to find it.
OMG science
OMG science
fromMail Online
5 days ago

Earth's rarest blue-green diamond could fetch 9.4 MILLION at auction

Ocean Dream is a rare fancy vivid blue-green diamond, cut to 5.50 carats, expected to sell for up to £9.4 million.
OMG science
fromArs Technica
5 days ago

Solar drone with jumbo jet wingspan broke a flight record-then it crashed

A Skydweller solar drone completed an eight-day record flight, then performed controlled water ditching and sank due to a non-buoyant composite structure.
OMG science
fromBig Think
6 days ago

The discovery of an atmosphere on a tiny Kuiper belt world

Accurate observations and experiments reveal atmospheres on distant Kuiper belt objects, extending Pluto’s uniqueness to a second known case.
OMG science
fromState of the Planet
6 days ago

A New Study Explains How Carbon Dioxide Cools the Upper Atmosphere-and Warms Earth Below

Rising CO2 cools the stratosphere by expanding infrared wavelength interactions, strengthening CO2’s heat-trapping effect while warming the surface and lower atmosphere.
OMG science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
6 days ago

Rubies and opals on Mars? The real treasure in the planet's gemstones may not be what you think

Mars contains corundum-like minerals resembling Earth gemstones, but impact-formed formation likely prevents gem-quality mining.
OMG science
fromMail Online
6 days ago

Alternate versions of you may exist across parallel universes

Tiny events could split reality into countless parallel universes, producing separate versions of you following different life paths.
OMG science
fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

The Savage Landscape by Cal Flyn review into the wild

Hydrothermal springs off California host dense pearl octopus nurseries, showing wilderness is never empty and is rich with life and meaning.
OMG science
fromABC7 San Francisco
6 days ago

SF startup spreads crushed rock to speed carbon removal and capture greenhouse gas

Crushed rock spread on farmland accelerates natural carbon dioxide binding, moving carbon into soil and water systems within years instead of millennia.
fromMail Online
6 days ago

Africa is splitting in TWO as new tectonic boundary forms in Zambia

“This fluid connection is evidence that the fault boundary of the Kafue Rift is active. 'Therefore, the Southwest African Rift Zone is too - and may be an early indication of the break-up of sub-Saharan Africa.'”
OMG science
fromMail Online
6 days ago

What it would have been like to experience dinosaur-killing asteroid

Around 66 million years ago, a six-mile (10km)-wide space rock called Chicxulub smashed into Mexico. The impact famously wiped out the dinosaurs, caused worldwide devastation and changed the course of history. The collision released a huge dust and soot cloud that partially blocked out the sun and caused temperatures to plummet - and in the years that followed, it wiped out more than 50 per cent of all animal and plant species on Earth.
OMG science
OMG science
fromNature
6 days ago

Ice core reveals longest-ever continuous record of Earth's climate

A 1.2-million-year Antarctic ice core links atmospheric CO2 changes to global temperature shifts across repeated climate cycles.
OMG science
fromKqed
1 week ago

Volunteer Helps With Monitoring Sea Otters in Monterey County | KQED

Otter monitoring in Elkhorn Slough showed many otters were residents, with frequent hauling out and healthier animals than elsewhere.
fromFuturism
6 days ago

Man Behind Simulation Hypothesis Warns That Extinction of Humanity Is a Risk We Have to Take

Back in 2003, when he was at Oxford, Bostrom penned an influential philosophical paper with the incredible title of “Are You Living in a Computer Simulation?” Loosely speaking, his argument was that sufficiently advanced civilizations will eventually build sophisticated simulations of their own ancestors - and that, given enough time in the simulation, those simulated beings will develop their own simulation inside the simulation, where a new set of simulated ancestors will do the same thing, ad infinitum.
OMG science
fromCN Traveller
6 days ago

Here's how to see the Northern Lights in the UK this week after a rare solar flare

The special sky colourings, caused by solar particles colliding with Earth's magnetic field, could be more visible than usual in the UK this week, according to experts, thanks to a recent powerful blast from the Sun.
OMG science
fromThe New Yorker
6 days ago

A Scientist's Close Call with Hantavirus Aboard the M.V. Hondius

During the expedition's first ten days, the ship navigated a strong storm, with ocean swells reaching two to three metres. Still, the sights were remarkable. "Lot of good remote birds!" the scientist texted friends. Then one of them sent him a link to a news story about an outbreak of a hantavirus, a potentially deadly pathogen traditionally carried by rodents, which had been reported on a cruise ship. "Please tell me you're not on this ship," the friend wrote.
OMG science
OMG science
fromFast Company
6 days ago

A study just found brain-eating amoeba in 2 popular U.S. national parks. Here's what you need to know

Naegleria fowleri was detected in 34% of thermally impacted park water samples, but no infections or deaths were reported at detection sites.
OMG science
fromNature
1 week ago

Best. Day. Ever. What does a good day in science look like?

Good days in science come from rare moments of discovery, wonder, and meaningful progress that motivate researchers to continue their work.
OMG science
fromNature
1 week ago

Audio long read: The air is full of DNA - here's what scientists are using it for

Airborne DNA can be used to monitor ecosystems, detect invasive species and pathogens early, and potentially assess conservation success, while raising ethical concerns about genetic privacy.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 week ago

Strange crystals found inside wreckage from the first nuclear bomb test

Scientists called it trinitite. Now researchers have identified a new material within trinitite called a clathratea cagelike chemical lattice that traps other atoms inside it. It's a completely new kind of clathrate crystal—something never seen before in nature or in the products of a nuclear explosion, says Luca Bindi, a geologist at the University of Florence in Italy, who is co-author of a new study detailing the finding.
OMG science
fromMail Online
1 week ago

Contagious yawning begins in the WOMB, experts reveal

Experts have discovered foetuses 'catch' yawns from their mothers and have been seen slowly opening and closing their mouths. As part of a study, they recorded the facial expressions of pregnant women while an ultrasound machine captured real-time images of their foetuses' faces. By comparing the two records, the researchers found that foetuses were more likely to yawn after their mothers did, with a delay of around 90 seconds.
OMG science
OMG science
fromABC7 San Francisco
1 week ago

Academy of Sciences secures grant to help endangered sea stars, Bay Area's coastal ecosystem

Lab-raised sunflower sea stars were successfully tested in Monterey Bay cages, supporting future reintroduction to restore coastal ecosystem balance.
OMG science
fromMail Online
1 week ago

Dark matter may have created a wormhole INSIDE the Milky Way

Wormholes could connect distant or time-separated points, and dark matter may keep them open long enough for traversal in the Milky Way.
OMG science
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 week ago

Ewine van Dishoeck, astronomer: We are the first generation who can bring the question of life on other planets from the realm of philosophy into real science'

Interstellar dust and astrochemistry reveal how clouds evolve and how stars and planets form through reactions impossible on Earth.
#uap
fromFuturism
1 week ago
OMG science

Government Releases UFO Files Containing Photos of "Anomalies" During Apollo 12 and 17

fromFortune
1 week ago
OMG science

UFO files show Buzz Aldrin saw a 'sizeable' object close to the moon and a 'fairly bright light source' that the Apollo 11 crew felt could be a laser | Fortune

OMG science
fromFuturism
1 week ago

Government Releases UFO Files Containing Photos of "Anomalies" During Apollo 12 and 17

Declassified UAP files include Apollo-era images and Gemini VII audio, with no consensus but preliminary analysis suggesting physical objects may be present.
OMG science
fromFortune
1 week ago

UFO files show Buzz Aldrin saw a 'sizeable' object close to the moon and a 'fairly bright light source' that the Apollo 11 crew felt could be a laser | Fortune

Pentagon released newly declassified UAP files and videos, including unresolved cases, while experts urge caution about misinterpretation and lack of evidence for alien life.
OMG science
fromMail Online
1 week ago

UFO files ignite biblical angel theory over 'eight-pointed' object

A 2013 UFO video released in 2025 has prompted comparisons to biblical angelic beings described in Ezekiel and Isaiah.
OMG science
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Pirouetting and gaping: mysterious whale behaviour documented as humpback migration begins

Jaw-gaping by humpback whales is a rarely documented behavior observed during migration and may function as social display or mouth-stretching for calves.
OMG science
fromFuturism
1 week ago

Versions of You in Other Universes May Be Subtly Affecting Your Destiny, Oxford Physicist Says

Quantum measurement outcomes arise from physical interactions, not human consciousness, and different observer experiences correspond to different quantum branches.
OMG science
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

The odds are not in our favour': who sets the Doomsday Clock and what can they tell us about the future of humanity?

Multiple escalating global risks—nuclear conflict, climate change, AI unpredictability, pathogen threats, and weakened preparedness—push humanity closer to catastrophe.
OMG science
fromEngadget
1 week ago

NASA's Curiosity rover gets its drill stuck, recordings from the Arctic seafloor and more science stories - Engadget

Curiosity successfully freed a rock stuck on its drill after multiple drilling adjustments, while Artemis II photos and a wasp named Attenboroughnculus tau drew attention.
fromBig Think
1 week ago

Starts With A Bang podcast #129 - Triton and the outer solar system

However, when it comes to the objects beyond Saturn, including the Uranian and Neptunian systems, as well as everything that lies in the Kuiper belt and beyond, the only probes we've ever sent their way are Voyager 2, which flew by Uranus and Neptune in the late 1980s, and New Horizons, which flew past Pluto in 2015.
OMG science
OMG science
fromFuturism
1 week ago

NASA Says Strange Red Dots in Sky Are an Unknown Class of Object That Looks Like a Huge Evil Eye

An X-ray emitting object among little red dots indicates a previously unseen, extreme stage of supermassive black hole evolution.
OMG science
fromBig Think
1 week ago

Ask Ethan: How empty are the depths of space?

Densities in space range from near-vacuum to extreme values, far exceeding or differing from Earth materials and even from each other across regions.
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