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fromComputerWeekly.com
16 minutes ago
Science

Dawn supercomputer gets sixfold boost thanks to 36m funding injection | Computer Weekly

UK government invests £36m to upgrade Dawn supercomputer, providing AI chips to researchers and boosting national AI compute capacity.
fromBig Think
2 hours ago

What the Universe looks like: from nearby to far away

Looking skyward fills us with wonder. Off-world, the Sun, planets, stars, and galaxies all await. Our Solar System encompasses our own cosmic backyard. Farther away, stars and star clusters abound within the Milky Way. Hundreds of billions of stars exist just within our home galaxy. Inside our Local Group, only Andromeda surpasses us in mass, size, and stars. More than 5 million light-years away, galaxies abound in groups and clusters.
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fromHigh Country News
56 minutes ago

How to find deep time in Seattle - High Country News

Downtown Seattle's building stones reveal geological history from tens of millions to over a billion years, visible in sandstone, limestone fossils, and ancient granite.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
55 minutes ago

Strong v swole: the surprising truth about building muscle

Mechanical tension, not muscle damage, is the primary driver of muscle hypertrophy through mechanoreceptor activation of the mTOR pathway.
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 hours ago

Starwatch: Moon occultation will wink out' Pleiades star cluster

On 27 January the Moon will occult Pleiades stars, causing them to disappear and reappear over about an hour for observers in suitable locations.
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 hours ago

Spider monkeys found to share insider knowledge' to help locate best food

Spider monkeys share food-location and fruiting-time information by frequently switching subgroups, producing combined, synergistic collective knowledge for foraging.
Science
fromTechCrunch
10 hours ago

This founder cracked firefighting -- now he's creating an AI gold mine | TechCrunch

HEN Technologies produces fire nozzles that boost suppression rates up to 300% while conserving 67% of water and plans to expand beyond nozzles.
Science
fromwww.dailymail.co.uk
1 day ago

America's nuclear sites secretly invaded by thousands of UFOs

Thousands of unidentified aerial objects have been observed within 25 miles of US nuclear power plants and weapons sites over the past eight decades.
fromwww.nature.com
20 hours ago

Quantum physicists just supersized Schrodinger's cat. What happens next could be revolutionary

A team based at the University of Vienna put individual clusters of around 7,000 atoms of sodium metal some 8 nanometres wide into a superposition of different locations, each spaced 133 nanometres apart. Rather than shoot through the experimental set up like a billiard ball, each chunky cluster behaved like a wave, spreading out into a superposition of spatially distinct paths and then interfering to form a pattern researchers could detect.
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fromwww.npr.org
23 hours ago

40 years after Challenger: Lingering guilt and lessons learned

Morton Thiokol engineers recommended against launching Challenger in freezing temperatures because ice and O-ring blow-by posed catastrophic risk.
fromFuturism
16 hours ago

Scientists Intrigued by Unfamiliar Life Form

It's a plant! It's a fungus! It's... an entirely new type of lifeform hitherto unknown to science? That appears to be the case for a puzzling, spire-shaped organism that lived over 400 million years ago, according to a new study published in the journal Science Advances. After analyzing its internal structures, the authors argue that the mystifying ancient beings known as prototaxites don't belong to any of the existing biological kingdoms.
Science
fromWIRED
21 hours ago

No One Is Quite Sure Why Ice Is Slippery

The reason we can gracefully glide on an ice-skating rink or clumsily slip on an icy sidewalk is that the surface of ice is coated by a thin watery layer. Scientists generally agree that this lubricating, liquidlike layer is what makes ice slippery. They disagree, though, about why the layer forms. Three main theories about the phenomenon have been debated over the past two centuries.
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fromTravel + Leisure
22 hours ago

The Brightest Meteor Shower of 2026 Will Peak Under a Moonless Sky-Here's When to Watch

The Perseids meteor shower in 2026 will be the brightest, peaking Aug. 12–13 under a new moon with 50–100 meteors per hour.
Science
fromwww.nature.com
19 hours ago

Babies who attend daycare share 'good' germs, too

Infants rapidly acquire substantial portions of their gut microbiota from nursery peers, sharing a significant fraction of microbial species within months of attendance.
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fromsfist.com
1 day ago

Field Notes: Ancient Star Map, New Cat Cafe, San Jose's Batman, and Disquiet in Suburbia

X-ray imaging recovers erased ancient Greek star maps; local community features include pollinators, a San Francisco cat cafe, Peninsula book clubs, and suburban unease.
#hipparchus
fromThe Beer Thrillers - Central PA beer enthusiasts and beer bloggers. Homebrewers, brewery workers, and all around beer lovers.
4 weeks ago

A Brew With a Twist: Could Beer Be a Vaccine? - The Beer Thrillers

Chris Buck isn't your typical home brewer - he's a virologist at the National Cancer Institute, known for discovering several human polyomaviruses, a family of viruses linked to cancers and serious infections in people with weakened immune systems. Buck's day job involves developing vaccines against these viruses, but he took things in an unexpected direction: using yeast engineered to produce viral proteins, he brewed a beer that delivered those proteins orally.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Back from the dead, a black hole is erupting after a 100-million-year hiatus

A dormant supermassive black hole in galaxy J1007+3540 restarted after about 100 million years, producing a one-million-light-year radio jet of star-forming particles and gas.
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fromFuturism
1 day ago

Mind Blowing James Webb Photo Shows Star Crumbling Into Dust

Webb captured an infrared close-up of the Helix Nebula revealing a dying star shedding its outer layers and leaving behind a white dwarf.
Science
fromWIRED
1 day ago

This Autonomous Aquatic Robot Is Smaller Than a Grain of Salt

An autonomous microrobot measuring 200 by 300 by 50 micrometers senses, decides, swims in water, operates without external control, and costs about one cent each.
fromArs Technica
1 day ago

Did Edison accidentally make graphene in 1879?

Graphene is the thinnest material yet known, composed of a single layer of carbon atoms arranged in a hexagonal lattice. That structure gives it many unusual properties that hold great promise for real-world applications: batteries, super capacitors, antennas, water filters, transistors, solar cells, and touchscreens, just to name a few. The physicists who first synthesized graphene in the lab won the 2010 Nobel Prize in Physics.
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fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Is It Possible to Be Too Extroverted?

Extroversion exists on a continuum; extreme extroversion can cause boredom, interrupting, and attention-seeking, but people can shift their level to support their values.
Science
fromFast Company
2 days ago

Neuroscience just discovered a weird way to tell when someone is really listening to you

People blink less when they concentrate harder on listening, so decreased blink rate can indicate attentive listening.
Science
fromFuturism
1 day ago

Scientists Astonished by Glimpse of Huge, Ancient Ocean on Mars

Delta-like formations in Coprates Chasma indicate extensive surface water and an inferred ancient sea level on Mars around three billion years ago.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

How math can reveal lottery fraud

On October 1, 2022, something strange happened in the Philippines: 433 people won the jackpot in the local lottery. For this particular lotto, six numbers ranging in value from 1 to 55 were randomly selected, and the 433 winners all matched. Even more bizarre, when arranged in ascending order, the winning numbers were: 9, 18, 27, 36, 45 and 54. In other words, the winning numbers were multiples of 9 (9 1, 9 2, 9 3, etcetera).
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fromNextgov.com
2 days ago

Getting quantum tech from research to commercialization requires partnership, federal experts say

Stronger government-private coordination is required to translate quantum research into commercial applications amid growing investment and technological challenges.
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fromArs Technica
2 days ago

Rocket Report: Chinese rockets fail twice in 12 hours; Rocket Lab reports setback

Long March 12B nears its first test flight amid global rocket progress and setbacks, including Artemis II rollout, Chinese launcher failures, and new Australian funding.
Science
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Why Intense Focus Beats Steady Habits

Occasional intense productivity sprints drive disproportionate neuroplastic change and accelerate meaningful progress beyond steady, incremental habits.
Science
fromNature
3 days ago

Greenland is important for global research: what's next for the island's science?

Greenland's scientific research is expanding and globally important, driven by strengthened infrastructure, international collaboration, and critical climate studies amid rising geopolitical interest.
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fromFast Company
2 days ago

This battery company from MIT helps factories ditch fossil fuels for cheap renewable power

A Joule Hive thermal battery enables factories to store cheap electricity as high-temperature heat (up to 1,800°C), cutting heating costs and replacing natural gas.
#blue-origin
fromFuturism
2 days ago

Experts Warn That There's Something Wrong With the Moon Rocket NASA Is About to Launch With Astronauts Aboard

Specifically, NASA has spent years since its successful uncrewed Artemis 1 mission studying how the extreme temperatures during reentry into the Earth's atmosphere affect Orion's heat shield. The Orion capsule sustained major damage after making its return in 2022. It cracked and chipped as a result of the extreme conditions during reentry. Over two years after the mission concluded, NASA said it had identified the root cause,
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fromZDNET
2 days ago

Forget your weather app: 15 reliable meteorologists and other sources for accurate ice storm updates

If you've ever glanced at your phone's weather app to check the day's forecast or to help plan for an upcoming storm, you've probably run across a scenario where you see an outrageous forecast. It happened to me earlier this week when I noticed my app was predicting more than 13 inches of snow for the Charlotte, NC area. Not only would that be a historic storm, but it would also be fairly apocalyptic for an area where even an inch of snow is a rarity.
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Science
fromwww.npr.org
2 days ago

Weather influencers are going viral. How much should we trust them?

Social media weather influencers offer fast, engaging storm coverage but vary widely in accuracy as platforms prioritize engagement over contextual, reliable information.
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fromTheregister
2 days ago

NASA planet hunter back online after low power problem

TESS resumed science operations on January 23 after exiting safe mode caused by solar-panel misalignment and battery discharge during a slew.
frominsideevs.com
3 days ago

Volvo's Parent Company Will Start Making Solid-State Batteries This Year

Completed packs will then go into test vehicles. Solid-state batteries, which are widely considered to be the holy grail in the energy storage game, are nearing reality with every passing day. Now, Geely, Volvo's parent company, is accelerating the development of its solid-state cells, with the first completed packs expected to be fitted into working vehicles this year, as reported by China's 21 Finance.
Science
fromNature
3 days ago

What a $1-billion pledge means for CERN's ambitious supercollider plans

The 91-kilometre Future Circular Collider (FCC), which would span the French-Swiss border and pass beneath Lake Geneva, is forecast to cost around 15 billion Swiss francs (US$19 billion) to make - if it gets built. The machine has the backing of the European Strategy Group, a group appointed by CERN's council to gather input from its member states and the physics community.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

The scientific quest to explore the hidden complexity of ice

Water forms many crystalline ice phases beyond common hexagonal Ih; scientists have created over 20 exotic ice structures under extreme conditions due to hydrogen-bond sensitivity.
Science
fromOpen Culture
3 days ago

Discover the World's First Earthquake Detector, Invented in China 2,000 Years Ago

Zhang Heng (78–139 AD) was a Han dynasty polymath who advanced astronomy, mathematics, instrumentation, and invented the first seismoscope.
Science
fromTheregister
2 days ago

Hacker taps Raspberry Pi to turn Wi-Fi signals into wall art

LED sculpture visualizes 2.4GHz and 5GHz radio activity by mapping spectrum segments to 64 filaments driven by HackRF One and Raspberry Pi.
Science
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Do Dogs Enjoy Playing More Than Cats, Rats, or Dolphins?

Joy serves as a unifying, evolved positive emotion across species that motivates adaptive behaviors, can become maladaptive in excess, and is difficult to measure.
#winter-storm
#deep-time
#gps
fromHigh Country News
3 days ago

The Grand Canyon and Meteor Crater have a surprising link - High Country News

Now, in a recent study published in Geology, retired University of New Mexico geologist Karl Karlstrom and his colleagues conclude that the asteroid's impact shook Marble Canyon hard enough to dislodge great chunks of stone and send a landslide tumbling into the river. The debris formed a natural dam that backed up the Colorado for over 50 miles to near present-day Lees Ferry.
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Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

Dolphins age more slowly with a little help from their friends

Strong, lifelong social bonds among male Shark Bay bottlenose dolphins are associated with slower biological aging measured via DNA methylation.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

The search for Leonardo da Vinci's DNAhow modern forensic science is trying to crack a 500-year-old puzzle

About ten years ago researchers across a wide range of disciplines, from forensic science and genetics to art history, got together with the goal of finding the Renaissance artist's DNA. Da Vinci had no children, and his remains were disturbed during the French Revolution. The hope is that uncovering his DNA could open the door to a number of discoveries, including new tools for authenticating artwork and potential clues about da Vinci's uncanny way of seeing the world.
Science
fromDefector
2 days ago

Let The Record Show That Otzi Fucked | Defector

Ötzi, the 5,000-something-year-old man found frozen in the Alps, did not have an easy go of it. He was probably murdered, shot from behind with an arrow that missed his vital organs and led to heavy bleeding and a prolonged and painful death. Days before his death, he fought another person in hand-to-hand combat and gashed his right hand. The more scientists have been able to study his body, the more ailments they have unveiled.
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fromBig Think
3 days ago

Ask Ethan: Where are all the blueshifted galaxies?

Nearly all distant galaxies are redshifted because cosmic expansion stretches light's wavelengths over distance, producing an overall recessional motion rather than symmetric approach and recession.
Science
fromBusiness Insider
2 days ago

Inside the National Air and Space Museum's 164-foot observation tower overlooking Washington, DC's largest airport

The Udvar-Hazy Center near Dulles Airport features over 200 historic aircraft and an observation tower with 360-degree airport views and live Air Traffic Control audio.
Science
fromArs Technica
2 days ago

This 67,800-year-old hand stencil is the world's oldest human-made art

A 67,800-year-old stenciled hand on a Sulawesi island cave is the world's oldest known rock art and earliest human presence in nearby islands.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

This is the most complete skeleton yet of our ancestor Homo habilis

A new, unusually complete Homo habilis skeleton from Lake Turkana shows a small, less modern body with long, ape-like arms and primitive proportions.
Science
fromTechCrunch
3 days ago

Struggling fusion power company General Fusion to go public via $1B reverse merger | TechCrunch

General Fusion will go public via a SPAC reverse merger to raise up to $335 million and complete its LM26 demonstration reactor.
Science
fromThe Atlantic
3 days ago

Science Is Drowning in AI Slop

Scientific journals are increasingly filled with fabricated references and AI-generated low-quality content, undermining peer review and trust in published research.
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fromFortune
3 days ago

AI drug startup Insilico Medicine launches an AI 'gym' to help models like GPT and Qwen be good at science | Fortune

Insilico Medicine is launching a service to train general-purpose LLMs for biology and chemistry, aiming to combine specialist-level performance with generalist flexibility.
#rocket-lab
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fromThe Atlantic
3 days ago

The Science That You Buy

Science-speak and biotech marketing have permeated beauty, fashion, and food, using technical claims that range from legitimate to transparently dubious.
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fromFuturism
3 days ago

Private Space Station Being Assembled for Launch

Private companies are developing commercial space stations to replace the ISS, with startup Vast building Haven-1 targeting an early 2027 launch on a Falcon 9.
#satellite-internet
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 days ago

Sonic booms can protect Earth from dangerous space junk

Sonic booms detected by global seismometer networks can reconstruct uncontrolled spacecraft reentry paths and locate crash sites, offering a low-cost monitoring tool day or night.
Science
fromFuturism
3 days ago

Astronauts Give Crucial Clue About NASA's Emergency Space Evacuation

A portable onboard ultrasound aided diagnosis during a medical emergency on the ISS, enabling early evacuation and safe return of four crew members.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 days ago

Scientists just calculated how many microplastics are in our atmosphere. The number is absolutely shocking

Microplastics are pervasive, found everywhere on Earth, from the Sahara Desert to patches of Arctic sea ice. Yet despite these plastic particles' ubiquity, scientists have struggled to determine exactly how many of them are in our atmosphere. Now a new estimate published in Nature suggests that land sources release about 600 quadrillion (600,000,000,000,000,000) microplastic particles into the atmosphere every year, about 20 times more than the number of particles contributed by oceans (about 26 quadrillion).
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fromTechCrunch
3 days ago

Blue Origin schedules third New Glenn launch for late February, but not to the moon | TechCrunch

Blue Origin will launch New Glenn in late February carrying an AST SpaceMobile satellite to low-Earth orbit instead of its Blue Moon MK1 lunar lander.
Science
fromianVisits
3 days ago

Tickets Alert: Visit the UK's largest particle accelerator - the Diamond Light Source

A synchrotron near Didcot offers occasional free public tours of its ring-shaped particle accelerator that produces powerful X-ray‑like light to probe materials.
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fromNews Center
3 days ago

Targeting Key Proteins in Fight Against ALS - News Center

RAD23 controls both degradation and stabilization of misfolded proteins; reducing RAD23 enhances clearance of disease-linked aggregates, offering a therapeutic target for neurodegenerative proteostasis dysfunction.
Science
from24/7 Wall St.
3 days ago

Precision Weapons That Rendered Traditional Battlefield Cover Useless

Precision weapons erased the protective value of traditional cover, forcing militaries to prioritize movement, dispersion, detection, and new survivability strategies.
Science
fromArs Technica
3 days ago

All sorts of interesting flags and artifacts will fly to the Moon on Artemis II

Artemis II will carry over 2,300 artifacts and mementos in an Official Flight Kit to honor aviation, past space missions, and American history during a crewed lunar flyby.
fromComputerWeekly.com
3 days ago

ESA invests in Swissto12 to accelerate European spacecom sovereignty | Computer Weekly

Aerospace and satellite systems manufacturer Swissto12 has secured €73m in financial support from European Space Agency (ESA) member states to accelerate Swissto12's development and industrialisation of the HummingSat space programme. Explaining its core mission, Swissto12 says it is enabling a transformational shift in the global satellite communications industry, away from legacy large, purpose-built, expensive and slow-to-deploy services towards smaller, faster, cheaper assets that leverage software-defined, reconfigurable payload architectures and agile, multi-orbit capabilities.
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fromBusiness Insider
3 days ago

Inside the restoration hangar where the National Air and Space Museum repairs and preserves historic aircraft for display

The Udvar-Hazy Center operates an on-site restoration hangar where visitors can watch slow, meticulous preservation of historic military aircraft like "Flak-Bait".
fromBusiness Insider
3 days ago

Elon Musk says it's 'highly likely' humans figure out how to reverse aging - but there's 'some benefit to death'

When we figure out what causes aging, I think we'll find it's incredibly obvious. It's not a subtle thing. The reason I say it's not a subtle thing is because all the cells in your body, you know, pretty much age at the same rate. I've never seen someone with an old left arm and a young right arm ever in my life, so why is that? There must be a clock that is synchronizing across 35 trillion cells in your body,
Science
fromenglish.elpais.com
3 days ago

Thousands of scientists inflate their CVs with self-published studies that cost millions of dollars of public money

Three scientists have coined a rather scatological, yet revealing, term: PISS, short for Published In Support of Self. The acronym defines a disconcerting phenomenon. Specialized scientific journals that were once published every two weeks or weekly now churn out special issues every few hours. Previously, these monographs were selective and entrusted to a leading figure in a scientific discipline. Now, even the most mediocre researchers receive a flood of invitations to edit one of these countless special issues, which have become a multi-million dollar business.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Blind, slow and 500 years old or are they? How scientists are unravelling the secrets of Greenland sharks

Greenland sharks are not blind, overturning prior assumptions and revealing major gaps in understanding of their biology, aging, behavior, and climate vulnerability.
Science
fromNature
4 days ago

What your breath says about the bacteria in your gut

Breath chemical profiles can partially predict gut microbial identities and abundances, offering a noninvasive method to detect gut-related microbes linked to diseases like asthma.
fromNature
4 days ago

Canny cattle: at least one cow knows how to use tools

An Austrian cow has shown that some bovines are intelligent enough to employ objects for their own ends.
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fromwww.dw.com
6 days ago

Meet Veronika, the clever cow with tools to scratch herself

Veronika, a 13-year-old Swiss Brown cow, uses sticks and deck brushes to scratch her own body, demonstrating embodied tooling and multipurpose tool use.
Science
fromDefector
3 days ago

Veronika The Cow's Record Scratch | Defector

Veronika the cow uses tools to scratch herself, showing anticipatory grip adjustments and varied techniques — first documented case of tool use in cows.
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Kangaroos' giant ancestor probably able to hop despite 250kg weight, scientists say

Giant 250 kg kangaroos could likely hop due to sufficient Achilles tendon and hindlimb bone strength despite their large body mass.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 days ago

The bacterium behind syphilis has a far more ancient history than we thought

Treponemal diseases, including syphilis, originated much earlier than thought; a 5,500-year-old Treponema pallidum genome from Colombia pushes back their evolutionary timeline.
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fromNature
6 days ago

Daily briefing: The first documented case of tool use in cattle

An Austrian cow uses brooms as tools; researchers quantified toxic masculinity in New Zealand; NASA rolled the Space Launch System toward Artemis II testing.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
4 days ago

Watch three solar prominences erupt in epic video

The sun's rhythmic rise and fall in the sky can make it easy to forget that our star is unpredictablea roiling, burbling mass of magnetically knotted plasma that governs the entire solar system. But a new video from the European Space Agency's (ESA's) Proba-3 mission that shows a string of fountainlike explosions on the sun offers a powerful reminder of our home star's active nature.
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fromFuturism
4 days ago

These Snapshots of the Moment a Star Exploded Will Fill You With Cosmic Dread

Interferometric images captured nova eruptions in real time, revealing complex, asymmetric thermonuclear explosions on white dwarfs fueled by accreted hydrogen.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
4 days ago

Crew-11 astronauts reflect on ISS medical evacuation and future of human spaceflight

How we handled everything all the way through ... nominal operations to this unforeseen operation really bodes well for future exploration, Fincke said. So when we're getting ready for Artemis, I am very optimistic.
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

Bezos's Blue Origin announces plans to deploy thousands of satellites in 2027

Jeff Bezos's space company Blue Origin on Wednesday announced a plan to deploy 5,408 satellites in space for a communications network that will serve data centers, governments and businesses, jumping into a satellite constellation market dominated by Elon Musk's SpaceX. Deployment of satellites is planned to begin in the last quarter of 2027, Blue Origin said, adding the network will be designed to have data speeds of up to 6 Tbps anywhere on Earth.
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fromwww.nature.com
5 days ago

Pyramidal neurons proportionately alter cortical interneuron subtypes

Pyramidal neurons regulate survival and differentiation of specific cortical interneuron subtypes, aligning interneuron abundance with pyramidal partner prevalence via activity-dependent and ligand-mediated mechanisms.
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