Science

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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 hour ago

Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS captured speeding through the solar system by Jupiter-bound spacecraft

Comet 3I/ATLAS, an interstellar visitor from outside our solar system, traveled through our cosmic neighborhood at speeds exceeding 150,000 miles per hour, displaying behavior consistent with normal comets despite its mysterious origin.
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fromFuturism
2 hours ago

NASA Rover Exploring Strange, Haunting Structures on Mars

NASA's Curiosity rover explores ancient boxwork formations on Mars that may indicate prolonged water presence and potential for past microbial life.
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fromwww.npr.org
1 hour ago

Unlocking the secrets of an ancient plague

A single strain of Yersinia Pestis bacteria killed hundreds of people in 7th-century Jerash within days, revealing the rapid spread and lethality of the Plague of Justinian pandemic.
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fromWIRED
11 hours ago

NASA Is Making Big Changes to Speed Up the Artemis Program

NASA plans to standardize the SLS rocket into a single configuration and launch every 10 months instead of every 3.5 years to improve reliability and reduce delays caused by hydrogen and helium leaks.
#planetary-alignment
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
7 hours ago

Who'd guess they're the same species?' What Italy's wall lizards reveal about genetic diversity and why it matters

Biodiversity encompasses variation within species, not just species inventory, as demonstrated by common wall lizards showing dramatic differences in color, size, and behavior despite being the same species.
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fromNature
2 days ago

Daily briefing: Stem-cell treatment strengthens people with age-related frailty

A single stem cell dose improves walking endurance and reduces frailty in older adults, with highest-dose recipients walking 60 meters farther after nine months.
#artemis-program-restructuring
#james-webb-space-telescope
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fromPsychology Today
21 hours ago

What Is Life?

Life's definition remains scientifically elusive, with origin theories suggesting asteroids triggered chemical cascades enabling self-organizing molecules to develop memory, agency, and consciousness from inert matter.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
21 hours ago

NASA scraps 2027 Artemis III moon landing in favor of 2028 mission

NASA postponed its crewed lunar landing from 2027 to 2028, with Artemis III now focusing on in-orbit testing before two lunar landing attempts in 2028.
#artemis-program
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fromArs Technica
16 hours ago

Photons that aren't actually there influence superconductivity

Virtual photons from quantum fields can degrade superconductor performance, providing insights into quantum mechanics and superconductivity behavior.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

How far are we from finding exomoons and exorings?

Giant planets in our solar system and around other stars likely possess numerous moons and rings, which astronomers can detect indirectly through transit methods and light curve analysis.
fromBig Think
1 day ago

Ask Ethan: Can quantum entanglement survive a black hole?

According to Einstein's General Relativity, for every black hole that exists within the Universe, there are only three properties that go into it that matter in any way: the black hole's total mass, the black hole's net electric charge, and the black hole's intrinsic angular momentum, and that's it. It doesn't matter what type of matter went into the black hole in order to form it; all that matters is its mass, charge, and angular momentum.
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fromNature
1 day ago

Pokemon turns 30 - how the fictional pocket monsters shaped science

It influenced my idea of what animals and natural history were, almost before I knew what real animals in the real world were like. For some researchers, themes in the Pokémon games mirror their everyday work. Spencer Monckton, a research scientist at the University of Guelph in Canada, who grew up playing the games and watching the TV series, says that collecting Pokémon is very much the same thing as what an entomologist does.
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fromFuturism
21 hours ago

There's a Perfectly Reasonable Explanation for Antarctica's Waterfall of Blood

Blood Falls in Antarctica results from iron-rich briny water from a subglacial lake being expelled by glacier pressure, with iron packaged in nanospheres by ancient bacteria.
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fromPhys
21 hours ago

Scent vs. brand image: What an EEG study reveals about luxury marketing

EEG analysis reveals fragrance significantly impacts consumer emotions, memory, and brand loyalty through measurable brain responses.
fromMail Online
1 day ago

Aliens could be CATAPULTED onto Earth via an asteroid, study claims

We found that life is more likely to survive an asteroid impact, so it's definitely still a real possibility that life on Earth could have come from Mars. Maybe we're Martians! The idea that life could have spread through the solar system or even the universe on rocks is known as the lithopanspermia hypothesis.
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fromPsychology Today
20 hours ago

Is the Gut-Autism Link Overblown?

The article from the journal argues that the gut-autism axis is a house of cards built on lousy studies with inconsistent data. They assert that the studies are contradictory and that too much emphasis is placed on dubious mouse models. It is notoriously challenging to nail down microbial causes of disease—it is hard enough to simply identify a normal microbiome.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
17 hours ago

Is there lightning on Mars? New evidence suggests it's there, just hard to see

Scientists have detected possible evidence of lightning on Mars, with the phenomenon likely appearing as electrostatically charged dust sparks rather than dramatic bolts due to Mars's thin atmosphere and weak magnetic field.
#neanderthal-human-interbreeding
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

How a teen's AI model could help stop poaching in rainforests

Both species are under threat. But while African savanna elephants are endangered, forest elephants are critically endangered. They're also highly elusive. Living in dense tropical rainforests in central Africa and parts of West Africa they're very hard to find and study.
Science
fromTheregister
20 hours ago

Harvard boffins crack the mystery of squeaky sneakers

The results showed that the squeaking sound is produced by wave-like patterns across the rubber surface, contacting and then releasing from the glass, allowing the sliding between the surfaces. The waves move across the interface between the two materials at a speed of nearly 300 kilometers per hour.
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fromenglish.elpais.com
23 hours ago

Ants trapped in amber reveal what diminutive life was like millions of years ago

Although there are many amber stones containing a single creature, there are fewer that include two or more, as is the case with a pair of mosquitoes trapped in amber 130 million years ago which tell us that, back then, males also sucked blood. Even more extraordinary is when several organisms can be seen interacting, either eating the other, acting as a parasite, or cooperating.
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fromNature
1 day ago

Is a 'selfish gene' making a Utah family have twice as many boys as girls?

Such sex 'distorters' have been discovered - and studied in great depth - in laboratory animals such as mice and flies, in which their effects can be detected through selective breeding. 'If you look, more often than not, you find them,' says Nitin Phadnis, an evolutionary geneticist at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City, who co-led the study.
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fromInsideHook
1 day ago

Scientists Question the Conventional Y Chromosome Wisdom

Researchers discovered evidence that certain genetic elements can skew sex ratios toward male offspring beyond the expected 50/50 split, with one family showing a 2:1 male-to-female ratio across generations.
Science
fromNature
3 days ago

Daily briefing: The new alternatives to animal testing

Organoids and alternative methods are replacing animal testing in research, while new publishing initiatives and scientific discoveries reshape how evidence is shared and geological history is understood.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

Rubin Observatory has started paging astronomers 800,000 times a night

The Vera C. Rubin Observatory's automated alert system successfully began processing hundreds of thousands of astronomical observations, enabling astronomers to identify significant celestial changes and events from nightly data.
Science
fromWIRED
2 days ago

Why Sierra the Supercomputer Had to Die

Sierra, a supercomputer that ran nuclear simulations for seven years at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, was decommissioned after becoming obsolete despite once ranking as the world's second-fastest machine.
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fromwww.npr.org
1 day ago

NASA lost a lunar spacecraft one day after launch. A new report details what went wrong

NASA's Lunar Trailblazer mission failed due to software that pointed solar panels 180 degrees away from the sun, combined with multiple cascading fault management errors that prevented correction.
#iss-medical-emergency
fromEngadget
1 day ago
Science

The astronaut whose illness forced an early return from the ISS was Mike Fincke

fromEngadget
1 day ago
Science

The astronaut whose illness forced an early return from the ISS was Mike Fincke

fromBig Think
2 days ago

Record-breaking natural laser discovered 11 billion light-years away

an electron within a molecule gets excited to a higher-energy state, the electron de-transitions back to the lower energy state, where it emits light of a very specific wavelength in the process. Then, pumped or injected energy re-excites an electron within that very same molecule back into that higher-energy state, over and over.
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fromTheregister
2 days ago

NASA safety watchdog says it's time to rethink Moon landing

Artemis III aims to land astronauts near the lunar South Pole, relying on SpaceX's Starship-derived Human Landing System (HLS) - a vehicle that has yet to achieve orbit, let alone venture anywhere near the Moon. It's an extraordinarily ambitious undertaking, and one the ASAP report has formally classified as high risk.
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#medical-emergency
fromFuturism
1 day ago
Science

The Saga of NASA's Space Station Evacuation Keeps Getting Stranger

NASA astronaut Mike Fincke experienced a medical event aboard the International Space Station requiring emergency evacuation, the first medical evacuation in the station's 25-year history.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago
Science

NASA identifies astronaut who triggered a medical evacuation of the ISS, but questions remain

NASA evacuated Crew-11 from the International Space Station after astronaut Mike Fincke experienced a medical event requiring advanced imaging unavailable in space.
#neurogenesis
fromNews Center
1 day ago
Science

As Superagers Age, They Make at Least Twice as Many New Neurons as Their Peers - News Center

fromNews Center
1 day ago
Science

As Superagers Age, They Make at Least Twice as Many New Neurons as Their Peers - News Center

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fromFortune
1 day ago

Harvard professor finally cracks the scientific secret of why sneakers squeak during basketball games | Fortune

Basketball shoe squeaks result from tiny sole sections rapidly losing and regaining contact with the floor thousands of times per second, creating ripples that produce the high-pitched sound.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

Chemistry at the heart of the Milky Way has never looked so gorgeous

ALMA telescope reveals unprecedented detail of the Milky Way's central molecular zone, showing gas, dust, and stars surrounding Sagittarius A* in extraordinary clarity.
Science
fromArs Technica
2 days ago

ULA isn't making the Space Force's GPS interference problem any easier

The US Space Force is launching new GPS satellites to replace aging constellation members and introduce advanced military capabilities like jam-resistant M-code signals.
fromTheregister
2 days ago

Moon's mighty magnetic field was a 5,000-year titanium blip

Our new study suggests that the Apollo samples are biased to extremely rare events that lasted a few thousand years - but up to now, these have been interpreted as representing 0.5 billion years of lunar history. It now seems that a sampling bias prevented us from realizing how short and rare these strong magnetism events were.
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fromOpen Culture
2 days ago

How Medieval Cathedrals Were Built Without Science, or Even Mathematics

Medieval cathedral builders engineered complex structures like Sainte-Chapelle without mathematics or formal science, using practical techniques and empirical methods instead.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Katharine Burr Blodgett made a breakthrough when she discovered invisible glass'

In 1938 Blodgett's meticulous experiments with thin film coatings on solid surfaces lead to her most important breakthrough: nonreflecting glass. GE's public relations machine kicks into high gear. Blodgett becomes an overnight sensation in both the scientific community and the press, which dubs her discovery invisible glass. The assistant to the Nobel Prize winner, long invisible herself, takes center stage.
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fromNature
3 days ago

Scientists face fallout for past associations with Epstein

Paleontologist Jack Horner lost his position at Chapman University following revelations of his 2012 visits to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein's property, documented in released files.
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

New image reveals secrets of Milky Way galaxy in stunning detail

The Alma telescope captured an unprecedented detailed image of the Milky Way's center, revealing previously unknown filaments of matter flowing to form stars and planets, advancing understanding of galactic formation.
fromFuturism
1 day ago

Damage to Chinese Spacecraft Was Worse Than Reported

My first thought was whether a small leaf had somehow stuck to the outside of the window. But then I quickly realized that couldn't happen because we were in space. How could there possibly be a fallen leaf there? We could see very clearly the small cracks [with the microscope]. Several were relatively long, and one was shorter. We could also see that some of the cracks had penetrated through.
Science
fromInside Higher Ed | Higher Education News, Events and Jobs
2 days ago

NSF Plans to Boost Staffing, Halve Grant Solicitations

The fewer solicitations you have, the less time grant applicants have to figure out which of our pigeonholes they fit into. In the past, a solicitation might have been for an individual program, which means it's attached to an individual program officer and a specific dollar amount. Now, instead of going to one program officer's area, the NSF will use technology to better route applications to wherever within the agency they can best be reviewed.
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Science
fromArs Technica
1 day ago

A non-public document reveals that science may not be prioritized on next Mars mission

NASA released a pre-solicitation for a $700 million Mars orbiter spacecraft contract to relay communications and provide navigation support through 2035, with competition expected to be more open than originally intended.
fromItsnicethat
2 days ago

This rocks: Zach Knott's Stone Isles is a geological ode to crystals, science and family

Every black-and-white photograph of the layers of our planet's tectonic history is an act of time travel - it gets us closer to understanding the past and the future of Earth. The photos are proof that the world is ever changing, showing how vast plains of sedimentary materials shift and morph over thousands of centuries.
Science
fromArs Technica
1 day ago

The physics of squeaking sneakers

Tuning frictional behavior on the fly has been a long-standing engineering dream. This new insight into how surface geometry governs slip pulses paves the way for tunable frictional metamaterials that can transition from low-friction to high-grip states on demand.
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fromNature
2 days ago

This compound enhances long-term memory of mice - but only in females

Acetate, a metabolic by-product from alcohol, glucose, and fiber breakdown, enhances memory performance in female mice through histone acetylation in the hippocampus.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Sex between Neandertals and anatomically modern humans tended to follow a specific pattern

Neandertal-human interbreeding was primarily between male Neandertals and female humans, evidenced by the absence of Neandertal DNA on modern human X chromosomes.
Science
fromKqed
2 days ago

How to See Tuesday Morning's 'Blood Moon' in the Bay Area | KQED

Lunar eclipses are visible from anywhere on Earth's night side without special equipment, and the upcoming total lunar eclipse will display a red 'blood moon' due to Rayleigh scattering of sunlight through Earth's atmosphere.
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fromNature
2 days ago

Neanderthal dad, human mum: study reveals ancient procreation pattern

Female Homo sapiens and male Neanderthals mated more frequently than the reverse pairing, shaping human genetic ancestry patterns revealed through analysis of female Neanderthal specimens.
fromMail Online
2 days ago

Why women's breasts are so large compared to other animals, revealed

Human breasts sit at an elevated temperature, protecting a newborn from hypothermia. What's more, the size and shape of the breast allows for broad contact surface - enhancing the heat transfer from mother to child. This could improve a newborn's chances of survival and provide an evolutionarily grounded explanation for the development of external breasts in humans.
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Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

The surprising scientific value of roadkill

Researchers use roadkill as a valuable scientific resource to study wildlife behavior, track species distribution, obtain specimens ethically, and discover new species across diverse research applications.
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fromMail Online
1 day ago

Biblical earthquake during Jesus' crucifixion confirmed

A 2012 geological study found seismic evidence near the Dead Sea suggesting earthquakes occurred around 31 BC and between 26-36 AD, potentially supporting the Gospel account of an earthquake during Jesus' crucifixion.
fromNature
2 days ago

Health effects linger 20 generations after rats are exposed to fungicide

Exposure to a fungicide induced changes to gene expression in rats that persisted for at least 20 generations. It also increased the chance of offspring developing kidney disease, obesity or experiencing complications when giving birth, according to the longest-running study of 'epigenetic' changes in mammals.
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Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Mosquitoes may have evolved a taste for human blood thanks to Homo erectus

Some mosquitoes developed a preference for human blood 1.6 to 2.9 million years ago, potentially coinciding with Homo erectus presence in Southeast Asia.
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fromNature
4 days ago

Daily briefing: COVID's origins - what we do and don't know

Horses produce two-toned vocalizations simultaneously using their vocal folds and larynx cartilage to convey complex messages, while AI threatens research programming jobs and Japan approves stem cell therapies with limited trial data.
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fromNature
3 days ago

The age of animal experiments is waning. Where will science go next?

Multiple governments are phasing out animal testing through regulatory changes while alternative scientific methods like organs-on-chips and AI models rapidly advance and gain adoption.
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fromNature
3 days ago

What's the best way to change research fields? These three scientists have ideas

Topic switching during research careers drives innovation and scientific breakthroughs, though timing and frequency matter significantly for career success.
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fromNews Center
2 days ago

Living 'Mini Brains' Meet Next-Generation Bioelectronics - News Center

Scientists developed a soft 3D electronic mesh that wraps around human neural organoids, enabling comprehensive mapping and manipulation of neural activity across entire miniature brain structures for the first time.
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fromTheregister
3 days ago

Orbital datacenters are a pie-in-the-sky idea: Gartner

Orbital datacenters are economically unviable and cannot serve Earth-based computing needs due to prohibitive launch costs, extreme temperature challenges, and lack of maintenance infrastructure.
fromWIRED
3 days ago

This Is the Worst Thing That Could Happen to the International Space Station

In the vacuum of space, the amount of debris-spent rocket stages, splintered satellites, micrometeoroids- numbers in the millions, all zooming about, often at 17,000 mph speeds. They're also constantly hitting each other in a tsuris of exponential littering. Most of these pieces are tiny, and many are not anywhere near the altitude of the ISS. But the area isn't completely clean.
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Science
fromMail Online
2 days ago

AI is being taught UK regional slang - so, how many terms do YOU know?

UK researchers are training AI systems to understand regional slang and accents so automated council phone lines can better serve local callers across different dialects.
fromNature
3 days ago

Pop-up journals for policy research: can temporary titles deliver answers?

I'm less interested in topics than in questions, and I'm less interested in publishing than I am in curation. When I've testified before Congress or dealt with an appropriations bill or a budget negotiation, this question, of what is the return on investments when you're doing R&D, comes up quite often. It's been asked by economists in very formal ways since at least the 1950s, but the data and the methods that were available were really not very strong.
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fromNature
3 days ago

Five ways to spot when a paper is a fraud

A growing number of AI tools can detect fraudulent elements in papers, but they can be expensive to use. Such tools are probably better deployed by journal publishers rather than individual reviewers, says Elisabeth Bik, a science-integrity consultant in San Francisco, California, especially because feeding unpublished content into AI tools can compromise confidentiality and is generally frowned on during peer review.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

Astronomers spot a young sun blowing bubbles inside the Milky Way

NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory captured the first image of a young sunlike star's astrosphere, a protective bubble of hot gas 120 light-years away, revealing how stellar winds shape these cosmic structures.
fromMail Online
3 days ago

See the Milky Way like NEVER before in largest image of its kind

One of the most exciting aspects is the rich chemistry we detect. We see dozens of different molecules, including some complex organic molecules that contain carbon, the same element that forms the basis of life on Earth. From ACES, we are learning more about how the ingredients for planets, and potentially life itself, can arise in the universe.
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fromThe New Yorker
2 days ago

How Michael Pollan Expanded His Consciousness

Michael Pollan's "A World Appears" explores consciousness by combining neuroscience, philosophy, literature, and psychedelics research to understand how neurons create selfhood and why consciousness evolved.
fromMail Online
3 days ago

Aliens DO exist - they just haven't visited Earth, NASA veteran claims

'There exists nothing today that says any alien or any alien machine has ever landed on the planet Earth. If you believe otherwise, you are being misled.' Dr. Lee emphasizes that despite widespread UFO claims, no credible evidence supports alien visitation to Earth, and alternative explanations exist for reported phenomena.
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Science
fromwww.independent.co.uk
3 days ago

Women sweep the board in UK's biggest science awards

Three British women scientists received the 2026 Blavatnik Awards for Young Scientists, each earning £100,000 for breakthrough research in DNA replication, electron energy transfer, and planet formation.
Science
fromABC7 Los Angeles
2 days ago

NASA's Mike Fincke identifies himself as the ailing astronaut who prompted space station evacuation

Astronaut Mike Fincke experienced a medical event aboard the International Space Station that required early mission termination and evacuation, though his condition stabilized quickly with crew and ground support.
fromNature
3 days ago

The surprising science of squeaky sneakers

Squeaking occurs across various contexts including shoes, bike brakes, rubber tires, and biomedical implants when soft and hard surfaces contact each other. Researchers used high-speed photography to study a rubber block sliding across hard acrylic to identify the source of these sounds. The investigation revealed that pulses similar to earthquake dynamics drive the squeaking phenomenon.
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fromwww.nature.com
3 days ago

Limitations of probing field-induced response with STM

We demonstrate how the apparent magnetic field induced lattice and CDW intensity change can be explained as a consequence of two independent experimental artifacts: a reconfiguration of atoms at the STM tip apex that alters the amplitudes of CDW modulations, and piezo creep, hysteresis and thermal drift, which artificially distort STM topographs.
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fromNature
3 days ago

The first ice-core record of historical atmospheric hydrogen levels

Atmospheric hydrogen levels fluctuate with climate changes and have increased significantly since pre-industrial times due to human activities, requiring consideration in projections of future emissions impacts.
fromMail Online
2 days ago

Earthquake strikes America's Heartland above ancient volcanoes

Although Kansas has no active volcanoes, the region marks the southern reach of the Midcontinent Rift System, a massive tectonic event that nearly split North America apart in Earth's distant past. When magma forced its way through the crust during that period, it left behind hardened igneous rock and deep fractures that remain buried thousands of feet underground.
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fromNature
3 days ago

Echinoderm stereom gradient structures enable mechanoelectrical perception - Nature

Sea urchin spines possess previously unknown mechanoelectrical perception abilities, responding to mechanical stimuli within 88 milliseconds through rapid spine rotation.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

Nobel Prizewinning brain scientist steps down over Epstein ties

My past association with Jeffrey Epstein was a serious error in judgment, which I deeply regret. I apologize for compromising the trust of my friends, students, and colleagues.
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fromNature
3 days ago

A membrane-bound nuclease directly cleaves phage DNA during genome injection - Nature

SNIPE is a membrane-bound nuclease defense system in bacteria that directly targets foreign nucleic acids to prevent phage infection through a novel mechanism distinct from established defense pathways.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

The surprising new physics of squeaky basketball shoes

We were not expecting to find so much richness and depth from a physics point of view underneath the sole of a shoe, says Adel Djellouli, a scientist at Harvard University and co-lead of the study. In a new study, scientists explore the physics that give rise to the familiar squeak of basketball shoes sliding on a hard surface.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 days ago

Chimpanzee pee reveals how our primate cousins are getting drunk on fermented fruit

Chimpanzees consume significant amounts of alcohol from fermented fruits, with urine analysis confirming ethanol levels detectable in field tests.
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Humans not Mimmo the dolphin need managing in Venice lagoon, say scientists

Italian scientists monitoring a solitary dolphin in Venice conclude that human behavior management, not wildlife control, is necessary to protect the animal from boat propeller dangers.
fromNature
3 days ago

Cavity-altered superconductivity - Nature

A grand aspiration of cavity quantum materials research is to uncover fundamentally new routes for controlling properties of matter by judiciously tailoring the quantum electromagnetic environment. Experiments with dark cavities revealed modified transport properties in the integer and fractional quantum Hall states of a 2D electron gas, as well as cavity-assisted thermal control of the metal-to-insulator transition in charge-density-wave systems.
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