Science

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fromTheregister
3 hours ago

DARPA pushes air-breathing VLEO satellites into production

DARPA's Otter program advances to phase 2 with a $44 million contract to develop air-breathing electric-propulsion VLEO satellites enabling extended operations.
fromTheregister
2 hours ago

Pegasus XL dusted off for NASA's Swift rescue run

Time is running out for the venerable NASA observatory. In September, the agency reckoned there was a 50 percent chance of an uncontrolled reentry by mid-2026, increasing to 90 percent by the end of the year. Although the spacecraft was launched in 2004, it remains operational and could continue to capture data on gamma-ray bursts if boosted to a higher orbit.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 hour ago

The James Webb Telescope May Have Seen the First Stars in the Universe

JWST observations of galaxy LAP1-B show strong helium and almost no heavy elements, making it the leading candidate for hosting Population III (first-generation) stars.
#3iatlas
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fromTechzine Global
12 hours ago

Google Gemini 3 available: leaps in reasoning and development

Gemini 3 Pro delivers state-of-the-art multimodal reasoning, surpassing predecessors on benchmarks and enabling powerful agentic, factual, and creative capabilities across Google's ecosystem.
Science
fromTechCrunch
6 hours ago

Onepot AI raises $13M to help make chemical drug creation easier | TechCrunch

Onepot AI builds AI-driven labs and automation to solve synthesis bottlenecks in small-molecule drug discovery and onshore U.S. chemical manufacturing.
#space-debris
fromNature
21 hours ago

Mind-reading devices can now predict preconscious thoughts: is it time to worry?

Before a car crash in 2008 left her paralysed from the neck down, Nancy Smith enjoyed playing the piano. Years later, Smith started making music again, thanks to an implant that recorded and analysed her brain activity. When she imagined playing an on-screen keyboard, her brain-computer interface (BCI) translated her thoughts into keystrokes - and simple melodies, such as 'Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star', rang out.
Science
fromdesignboom | architecture & design magazine
14 hours ago

vibrating ceramic ring produces drinking water from humid air in few minutes

In their system, the engineers use ultrasonic waves to shake the water out of the material that can absorb moisture from the air. This said material is an ultrasonic actuator made of a flat ceramic ring, which receives the electricity during vibrations. In their research, the team learned that this vibration can break the weak connection between the water molecules and the sorbent, so when the waves hit the flat ceramic ring and the system, the water inside it loosens and falls out as droplets,
Science
fromInside Higher Ed | Higher Education News, Events and Jobs
11 hours ago

AI Likely Driving Surge in Letters to the Editor

Researchers and scientific journals can add a new possibility to a growing list of artificial intelligence-generated horrors: letters to the editor. Two days after researchers published a paper on the efficacy of ivermectin as a treatment for malaria in the New England Journal of Medicine this summer, the journal received a letter to the editor from another researcher criticizing the paper's findings.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
6 hours ago

After Last Week's Spectacular Auroras, What's Next for the Sun?

Solar activity peaked in October 2024, and despite declining sunspot counts the Sun can still generate significant space weather events during the cycle's declining phase.
#shenzhou-20
Science
fromFast Company
11 hours ago

This startup is growing mini-livers to keep patients alive

3D-printed PLGA bone scaffolds gained FDA clearance but underperformed versus grafts; company plans to develop a simplified, cell-seeded miniature liver within about three years.
Science
fromwww.nature.com
21 hours ago

The Asymmetric Synthesis of an Acyclic N-Stereogenic Amine

Catalytic asymmetric addition of enol silanes to nitronium–chiral anion ion pairs yields stable, enantiopure acyclic N-stereogenic (anomeric) amines by slowing pyramidal inversion.
fromPsychology Today
4 hours ago

Train Your Brain and Avoid These Thinking Liabilities

Mysterious mental misfires are not random and, in many cases, predictable and avoidable. Once you understand the neuroscience behind these common tasks, the confusion evaporates, and you can avoid the self-doubt and humiliation that often come from what we sometimes conclude are examples of individual stupidity. What appears to be a personal flaw is actually just your ancient brain navigating a modern world.
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fromArs Technica
7 hours ago

Twin suction turbines and 3-Gs in slow corners? Meet the DRG-Lola.

Suction-fan and covered-wheel electric race concept produces far greater downforce efficiency, yields much faster lap times and uses far less energy than current F1 cars.
Science
fromFortune
10 hours ago

Quantum computers could be powerful enough to decrypt Bitcoin sometime after 2030, CEO of Nvidia's quantum partner says | Fortune

Fault-tolerant quantum computers could break Bitcoin security by solving mining or brute-forcing wallets shortly after 2030.
Science
fromNature
21 hours ago

ZAK activation at the collided ribosome - Nature

ZAKα senses stalled ribosomes and collisions to activate p38/JNK ribotoxic stress signalling, with RACK1 and scaffold proteins coordinating collision-dependent responses.
Science
fromScienceDaily
16 hours ago

How to keep Ozempic/Wegovy weight loss without the nausea

GLP-1 drugs alter brain circuits that control hunger, nausea, thirst, and reward, producing weight-loss benefits but causing gastrointestinal side effects in many people.
Science
fromFast Company
10 hours ago

This fan sneaks scents into your sleep to improve your memory

Nightly exposure to varied scents during sleep can improve memory by stimulating the olfactory-hippocampal pathway, enhancing neuroplasticity and gray matter.
Science
fromwww.nature.com
21 hours ago

Integrator dynamics in the cortico-basal ganglia loop for flexible motor timing

Striatal inhibition rewinds the neural timer while frontal cortical inhibition pauses it, altering ramping dynamics and shifting anticipated motor (lick) timing.
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 hours ago

Christie's withdraws rare first calculator' from auction after French court halts export

La Pascaline, one of eight surviving 1642 calculating machines, faces national treasure classification and a provisional export ban pending a Paris court decision.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
8 hours ago

These Birds Learned to Tweet Like R2-D2. Listen to the Uncanny Results

Starlings mimic complex sounds like R2-D2 more accurately than parrots because their syrinx can produce multiphonic sounds by independently controlling both sides.
fromNature
21 hours ago

Connectivity underlying motor cortex activity during goal-directed behaviour

In brief, circular (3-mm diameter) craniotomies were centred over ALM (2.5 mm anterior and 1.5 mm lateral from Bregma). We expressed the soma-targeted opsin ST-ChrimsonR in excitatory neurons by injecting a virus (10 12 titre; AAV2/2 camKII-KV2.1-ChrimsonR-FusionRed; Addgene, plasmid, catalogue no. 102771) into the craniotomy, 400 µm below the dura (five to ten sites, 20-30 nl each), centred in the craniotomy and spaced by approximately 500 μm between injection sites.
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fromNature
21 hours ago

Repulsions instruct synaptic partner matching in an olfactory circuit - Nature

Repulsive and attractive cell-surface signals coordinate axon guidance and synaptic partner selection, with attraction dominating known CSP-mediated final partner choices.
#mars
Science
fromCornell Chronicle
21 hours ago

Professor emeritus Howard Howland, expert on eyes, dies at 92 | Cornell Chronicle

Howard Howland, a Cornell neurophysiologist, advanced aberrometer technology, developed noninvasive infant and animal eye-focus measurement methods, researched vision development globally, and died at 92.
Science
fromBig Think
14 hours ago

How are redshift, temperature, distance and time related?

Cosmic expansion decouples redshift, temperature, distance, and lookback time for objects beyond gravitationally bound regions, complicating their interrelations.
fromenglish.elpais.com
10 hours ago

Neanderthals also kissed: A gesture of love that is 21 million years old

The findings, published on Wednesday in the journal Evolution and Human Behavior, reveal that, far from being a recent human cultural invention, kissing is an ancient trait deeply rooted in our biology. This is the first time anyone has taken a broad evolutionary lens to examine kissing. Our findings add to a growing body of work highlighting the remarkable diversity of sexual behaviors exhibited by our primate cousins, said Matilda Brindle, lead author of the study and an evolutionary biologist in the Department of Biology at Oxford, in a statement.
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#neanderthals
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fromTechCrunch
1 day ago

Zap Energy ramps up the pressure in its latest fusion device | TechCrunch

Zap Energy’s Fuze-3 achieved record Z-pinch plasma pressure (232,000 psi) and 21 million°F, advancing toward but still far from scientific breakeven.
Science
fromNature
2 days ago

Daily briefing: This whale has been spotted alive in the wild for the first time ever

First confirmed live ginkgo-toothed beaked whales sighted off Mexico; oldest RNA recovered from woolly mammoths; tirzepatide suppresses brain activity linked to food cravings.
Science
fromFuturism
23 hours ago

Astronomer Explores Possibility of Launching Bad People Into Sun

A rocket aimed at the Sun will miss unless it cancels Earth's orbital velocity; enormous retrograde speed is needed to drop into the Sun.
Science
fromBusiness Insider
1 day ago

Elon Musk wants to create a 'modern-day Library of Alexandria' - and send copies to deep space

Grokipedia aims to preserve human knowledge by etching content in stone and distributing copies to the Moon, Mars, and deep space.
Science
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 day ago

Ukrainian astronomers continue to observe the stars amid the war

UTR-2, the world's largest low-frequency radio telescope, was occupied and damaged in the Russian invasion, forcing astronomers to relocate operations to safer Ukrainian telescopes.
Science
fromABC7 Los Angeles
1 day ago

America is grappling with an air traffic controller shortage. Can AI help?

AI can assist aviation with data analysis but cannot replace human air traffic controllers due to safety-critical human judgment, multitasking, and near-perfect performance.
Science
fromMail Online
1 day ago

Incredible simulation charts the Milky Way 10,000 years

AI-enabled simulations now model the Milky Way star-by-star, charting over 100 billion stars across 10,000 years and enabling roughly 100× larger simulations.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Will We Run Out of Rare Earth Elements?

Seventeen rare-earth elements are essential to modern technologies but finite, environmentally harmful to mine, and require cleaner extraction, recycling, and sustained research funding.
Science
fromFuturism
1 day ago

Astronomers Witness the Moment a Fatal Shockwave Bursts Through the Surface of a Star

Astronomers captured the earliest detailed observation of a supernova shockwave tearing through a star's surface, revealing the explosion's shape and geometry.
Science
fromMail Online
1 day ago

The solution to UK climate crisis? Scientists to turn CO2 to STONE

Eight UK sites with volcanic rock can mineralize and store over three billion tonnes of CO2, providing decades of national carbon removal capacity.
Science
fromTheregister
1 day ago

Starlink performance slows after sats dodge solar storms

Starlink's solar-storm mitigations can cause cascading orbital adjustments that degrade satellite performance for days, revealing risks in autonomous constellation management during extreme space weather.
Science
frominsideevs.com
1 day ago

The Facts Are In: You Shouldn't Worry About EV Battery Replacements

Modern electric-vehicle batteries very rarely fail, with replacement rates around 0.3% for post-2022 EVs and under 4% among Recurrent owners.
fromFuncheap
1 day ago

"Science@Cal": Renowned Scientist Lecture | UC Berkeley

Science@Cal is proud to present a series of free public science lectures on the third Saturday of every month. These talks are given by renowned UC Berkeley scientists and aimed at general audiences. Talks take place on the UC Berkeley campus at 11 am. Doors open thirty minutes before the talk and seating is on a first-come, first-served basis. Each talk is planned to last an hour, plus time for at least a few questions at the end.
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fromFuncheap
1 day ago

"Science@Cal": Renowned Scientist Lecture | UC Berkeley

Free public science lectures by UC Berkeley scientists occur monthly on the third Saturday at 11 am in 159 Mulford Hall, University Dr, Berkeley.
Science
fromTheregister
1 day ago

China readies a lifeboat for stranded Shenzhou crew

China plans an early unmanned Shenzhou-22 launch to deliver supplies and provide a rescue lifeboat for the Shenzou-21 crew after Shenzhou-20 was damaged by debris.
fromPortland Mercury
22 hours ago

To whomever is tagging

"Shrimps is bugs" all over the city: Thank you for leading me to this rabbithole of scientific and taxonomic discovery.
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Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

December 2025: Science History from 50, 100 and 150 Years Ago

The Heimlich maneuver is an effective first-aid technique endorsed by the American Medical Association to expel airway obstructions by forceful upward abdominal thrusts.
Science
fromTheregister
1 day ago

Rust on the Moon? Far-side dirt says yes, actually

Micron-scale hematite and maghemite grains were found in Chang'e 6 samples from the Moon's far-side South Pole-Aitken Basin, indicating localized oxidation events.
Science
fromThe Nation
1 day ago

The Deliberate Decimation of the Federal Workforce

Federal scientific and administrative systems are rapidly being dismantled, undermining institutions and disrupting public-sector climate science careers.
fromFast Company
1 day ago

Why do smart people do dumb things?

Most of us have strong opinions about what those words mean, but scratch the surface and it becomes clear that "smart" and "dumb" are slippery, subjective constructs. What seems smart to one person may strike another as naive, arrogant, or shortsighted. Worse still, our own perception of what's smart can shift over time. Yesterday's clever decision can look like today's regrettable blunder.
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Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Poem: The Covert Herbarium of Cryptogamic Botany'

Leopold and Rudolph Blaschka created detailed glass models of plant species and plant diseases that reveal fungal infections and spore-driven orchard epidemics.
Science
fromSlate Magazine
1 day ago

The Michelin-Star System Is Slowly Taking Over the American Restaurant World. But There's One City It Should Have Left Alone.

Accidental discovery of vulcanization transformed rubber from temperature-sensitive, commercially useless material into a stable industrial material enabling products like tubing, gaskets, padding, and tires.
Science
fromMail Online
1 day ago

Scientist claims dogs can be autistic like humans - here are the signs

Dogs can be neurodiverse and display brain differences and behaviours comparable to human autism and ADHD.
Science
fromBig Think
1 day ago

Jellyfish and bunny ear galaxies have cosmic consequences

Fast-moving galaxies traveling through denser intergalactic medium can be ram-pressure stripped, producing tails of material that can sometimes form stars.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Your Face and Voice Should Belong to You, Not AI

Generative artificial intelligence can now counterfeit reality at an industrial scale. Deepfakesphotographs, videos and audio tracks that use AI to create convincing but entirely fabricated representations of people or eventsaren't just an Internet content problem; they are a social-order problem. The power of AI to create words and images that seem real but aren't threatens society, critical thinking and civilizational stability.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Math Puzzle: Falling Through

Some say the reason most manhole covers are round is that a circle cannot fall through a smaller circular hole. Which of these other two-dimensional shapes cannot fall through a hole that is the same shape but slightly smaller? Shapes 1, 2 and 3 can all fall through their own holes. Shape 4 cannot. Challenge problem: Can you find another shape that cannot fall through a slightly smaller hole of the same shape?
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Science
fromWIRED
1 day ago

Valar Atomics Says It's the First Nuclear Startup to Achieve Criticality

Valar Atomics, aided by a national lab, achieved reactor criticality in a DOE pilot aiming for three startups to reach criticality by July 4, 2026.
Science
fromNature
5 days ago

Daily briefing: How ancient humans bred and traded dogs

Modern dog skull diversity arose thousands of years ago while microrobots and AI advances demonstrate biomedical delivery and self-taught physics capabilities.
Science
fromTheregister
2 days ago

Europe joins the US as an exascale superpower

EuroHPC's Jupiter supercomputer exceeded one exaFLOPS on the HPL benchmark, becoming Europe's first public double-precision exascale system.
Science
fromMail Online
2 days ago

The most detailed map of a brain ever seen details 10 MILLION neurons

A digital map models nearly 10 million neurons, 26 billion synapses and 86 mouse cortex regions, enabling computational study of brain function and disease.
Science
fromFast Company
1 day ago

The academic origins of everyday tech

University-based academic research produced foundational innovations that underpin everyday technologies, logistics systems, and billion-dollar industries.
Science
fromNature
2 days ago

Why space exploration needs science leadership now - before it's too late

Scientific inquiry must guide and shape an expanding, geopolitically driven era of lunar and deep-space exploration to ensure missions yield knowledge, innovation and lasting value.
fromArs Technica
2 days ago

After last week's stunning landing, here's what comes next for Blue Origin

"They're coming off the line at one a month right now, and then we're ramping from there," he said of the second stages, known internally as GS-2. "It would be ambitious to get to the upper level, but we want to be hardware rich. So, you know, we want to try to keep building as fast as we can, and then with practice I think our launch cadence can go up."
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fromFortune
2 days ago

Inside billionaire Gabe Newell's new $500 million superyacht, which has a submarine garage and its own hospital | Fortune

Gabe Newell's 364-foot superyacht Leviathan combines marine research infrastructure and high-end gaming amenities, emphasizing purposeful design and crew-focused operations.
Science
fromMail Online
2 days ago

Unravelling mystery of Earth's earliest life - dating back 3.3bn years

Chemical signatures of life were detected in 3.3-billion-year-old rocks using pyrolysis-GC-MS and machine learning, extending chemical evidence by about 1.6 billion years.
#coastal-fog
#holiday-festivities
Science
fromFuturism
2 days ago

Harvard Scientist Suspicious About 3I/ATLAS' Origins Fires Back at Critics

Interstellar object 3I/ATLAS remains under investigation; anomalies prompt consideration of a possible artificial origin pending high-resolution NASA imagery and additional data.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

Do Black Holes Delete Reality?

Around 38 percent of websites that were on the Internet in 2013 are gone now. Half of Wikipedia pages reference dead links. Information seems to be disappearing all around us, and that's nothing new. Over geological time, information loss is the norm, not the exception. Yet according to physics, information is never destroyed. In principle, a burned book is just as readable as the originalif you analyze the ashes of the fire, the smoke and the flames to re-create the incinerated words.
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fromWIRED
2 days ago

A Collision with Space Debris Leaves 3 Chinese Astronauts Stranded in Orbit

Three astronauts returned after 204 days while three crewmates stayed aboard Tiangong because one Shenzhou return capsule was damaged, suspected from small debris.
Science
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Unexpected Creative Tool Use By a Wild Wolf to Catch Crabs

Wild wolves have been observed using ropes as tools to pull submerged crab traps, expanding known nonhuman tool use beyond previously documented species.
Science
fromTime Out New York
2 days ago

The a new dinosaur exhibit at the American Museum of Natural History shows how their world collapsed

American Museum of Natural History recreates the 66-million-year asteroid impact, demonstrating catastrophic effects, ecosystem collapse, and how the extinction enabled mammal ascendancy.
Science
fromMail Online
2 days ago

Six new constellations over Britain - including The Sausage Roll

Six food-themed constellations are visible over Britain during Thursday's micro New Moon, creating excellent dark-sky conditions for stargazing.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

How a 20-Year E-mail Time Capsule Delivered Messages across Decades

It's a question David Ewalt, Scientific American's editor in chief, was tasked with tackling long ago, where he was forced to look at memory, human connection and technology in a way that asked deeper questions about how we preserve information in the digital age and what it means to come into contact with our past selves. Hi, David. David Ewalt: Hi, it's nice to join you.
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fromNews Center
1 day ago

Eleven Feinberg Investigators Named to 2025 Highly Cited List - News Center

Eleven Feinberg faculty were named to Clarivate Analytics' 2025 Highly Cited Researchers list for top 1% citation impact from 2014–2024.
Science
fromBig Think
2 days ago

The decline and fall of stars in the Universe

Star formation peaked about three billion years after the Big Bang at "cosmic noon" and has declined to roughly 3% of that peak and continues falling.
Science
fromThe Washington Post
2 days ago

See how this wolf steals fish, a new discovery of animals using tools

A wild wolf manipulated a fishing float and rope to retrieve and open a crab trap and eat its bait on a British Columbia shore.
Science
fromNature
2 days ago

George Smoot obituary: Charismatic cosmologist who revealed ripples in the Big Bang's afterglow

George Smoot measured cosmic microwave background temperature variations with COBE, revealing primordial density ripples that supported dark-matter-driven galaxy formation; he died aged 80.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

Could a Time Capsule Outlast Plate Tectonics?

Roxbury puddingstone, the mottled rock quarried nearby and used for much of the old church masonry in Boston, formed 600 million years ago in violent submarine landslides off the coast of a barren volcanic microcontinent that rifted off Africa. This is so long ago thatin the course of the perpetual wander of continentsthe whole thing happened somewhere near the south pole.
Science
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fromSFGATE
2 days ago

UC Berkeley leaps ahead in decoding whale talk with AI

Sperm whale vocalizations include structured sounds resembling human vowels, indicating more complex communication than previously recognized.
Science
fromFortune
2 days ago

Hard work beats talent when it comes to success, UPenn psychologist says: 'Effort counts twice' | Fortune

Effort and perseverance matter more than innate talent; skills require repeated application and grit to produce long-term success.
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

These rare whales had never been seen alive. Then a team in Mexico sighted two

A biopsy and acoustic tracking off Baja California confirmed the first in‑wild sighting of a gingko‑toothed beaked whale after five years of following a distinct BW43 call.
Science
fromThe Mercury News
2 days ago

Why are birds perching on only 1 set of power lines in Newark?

Birds perch on high power lines for vantage, rest, social interaction, protection and warmth, and typically avoid electrocution because no voltage difference exists across their bodies.
fromwww.mercurynews.com
2 days ago

Why are birds perching on only 1 set of power lines in Newark?

First off, birds really like sitting on elevated lines, whether those are power lines, telecommunication wires or cable lines. The high wires provide an excellent vantage point for surveying the area, giving them a bird's eye view of the territory. From there, they can look around for food and watch out for predators. The lines are also a convenient spot for taking a rest and as there are other birds on the line, a chance to converse.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

Catch a Shooting Star' as Leonid Meteor Shower Peaks Tonight

The Leonid meteor shower is peaking this week, potentially bringing hundreds of long-tailed meteors with it. This annual fall display is an excellent opportunity to spot fireballs in the night sky. Meteor showers are the beautiful result of Earth moving through the trail of debris streaming from comets and asteroids as they make their own way around the sun. As these chunks of space rock enter our atmosphere, they burn up as shooting stars. And if they land, they become meteorites.
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fromwww.npr.org
2 days ago

Why some ant colonies get tricked into killing their own queens

Some female ants chemically infiltrate other colonies and manipulate workers to kill the resident queen, thereby usurping reproductive control and inheriting the workforce.
Science
fromFuturism
2 days ago

Scientist Say They've Found Caves on Mars That May Contain Life

Eight caves in Hebrus Valles show geological and mineralogical evidence consistent with formation by water and may preserve signs of past or present life.
Science
fromArs Technica
2 days ago

Ancient Egyptians likely used opiates regularly

Ancient Egyptians regularly used opiates and other psychoactive substances, as shown by residue analysis of ceremonial and household vessels.
Science
from24/7 Wall St.
3 days ago

Here's Why Rocket Lab Will 5x Before 2035

Rocket Lab reported record Q3 revenue and over $1 billion backlog, but Neutron delays triggered a stock drop despite strong core momentum.
fromInsideHook
4 days ago

NASA's Next Mission to Mars Is Taking an Unexpected Route

There are a few notable elements to NASA's launch this week of a new mission to Mars, known as Escapade. There's the matter of the Blue Origin rocket used to send the probe into space and returning successfully to Earth, making it a milestone for the spaceflight company's New Glenn rockets. As Blue Origin CEO Dave Limb said in a statement, "never before in history has a booster this large nailed the landing on the second try."
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fromWIRED
3 days ago

How Genes Have Harnessed Physics to Grow Living Things

Mechanical forces like the Marangoni effect guide embryonic axis formation, complementing genetic and chemical cues in shaping development.
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