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fromNews Center
57 minutes ago

Elucidating Brain Communication Networks - News Center

Brain network coordination and plasticity mechanisms reveal how regions control behavior, language, and forgetting, offering paths for improved diagnostics and therapies.
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fromTechzine Global
9 hours ago

Dutch QuantWare starts quantum chip production on home soil

QuantWare will open a Delft factory producing 10,000-qubit quantum chips, aiming to capture a share of the global next-generation supercomputer market.
fromMail Online
8 hours ago

Scientists discover a 'new state' of matter between solid and liquid

Researchers call this new type of material a 'corralled supercooled liquid'. Atoms in a liquid are normally like people in a busy crowd, constantly jostling and pushing past one another. However, scientists have now found a way to freeze some of these atoms in place, creating an immobile 'corral' that keeps the mobile liquid atoms trapped inside. Once the liquid is trapped inside a ring, its behaviour becomes different to any known form of matter.
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frominsideevs.com
1 hour ago

This Silicon Anode Breakthrough Could Mark A Turning Point For EV Batteries

Two U.S.-based battery companies report 100% silicon-carbon anodes achieving stable high-temperature performance in pouch cells, offering a potential graphite replacement for higher energy density.
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fromNature
18 hours ago

What will be the first AI-designed drug? These disease-fighting antibodies are top contenders

AI-designed antibodies are nearing therapeutic viability, showing properties of commercial drugs and enabling more precise, democratized antibody engineering.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
4 hours ago

Breakthrough in Digital Screens Takes Color Resolution to Incredibly Small Scale

A new reflective display could shatter those restrictions with resolutions beyond the limit of human perception. In a recent study in Nature, scientists describe a reflective retina e-paper that can display color video on screens smaller than two square millimeters across. The researchers used nanoparticles whose size and spacing affect how light is scattered, tuning them to create red, green and blue subpixels.
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fromBig Think
4 hours ago

How slime and dumb rocks can help us better define "smart"

Brainless slime mold demonstrates problem-solving, navigation, and decision-making, indicating intelligence can emerge from distributed, non-neural systems.
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fromArs Technica
2 hours ago

In a major new report, scientists build rationale for sending astronauts to Mars

Human missions to Mars should prioritize searching for current or past life, making astrobiology the central scientific objective of crewed exploration.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
56 minutes ago

Black Hole Caught Blasting Matter into Space at 130 Million MPH

Supermassive black holes are the monsters of the universe, so it is perhaps only fitting that astronomers discovered one of these behemoths unleashing a bright x-ray flare that one of the researchers, astronomer Matteo Guainazzi, described as almost too big to imagine in a European Space Agency (ESA) press release. Within hours of erupting, the blast faded, and the black hole began to whip up winds more powerful than anything we can imagine on Earth
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fromwww.theguardian.com
4 hours ago

Longevity supplements are sold as helping prevent ageing. But do they have any long-term benefits or increase lifespan? | Antiviral

NAD precursors (NR, NMN) and TMG are marketed to raise NAD and counter ageing, but causal evidence that they extend human lifespan is weak.
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fromNews Center
1 hour ago

Arvanitis Honored with International Leadership Award - News Center

Constadina Arvanitis received the 2025 RMS Vice President's Award for leadership and service advancing global scientific imaging and microscopy.
fromFast Company
1 hour ago

Aurora borealis forecast tonight: Northern lights visible in these 15 states. Can you brave winter weather for a geomagnetic storm?

The Northern Lights, also known as aurora borealis, may be visible in more than a dozen U.S. states Tuesday, December 9, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Space Weather Prediction Center (NOAA). A full-halo coronal mass ejection (CME) is expected to reach Earth early to midday on Tuesday, potentially causing periods of "strong" G3 geomagnetic storms (on a scale of G1 to G5).
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
56 minutes ago

Dark Skies Should Make This Year's Geminids Meteor Shower Spectacular. Here's How to See Them

The annual Geminids meteor shower is a favorite celestial sight around the holidays for many. This year's show is due to peak this weekend with near-ideal viewing conditions for observers in the Northern Hemisphere. Named for the constellation Gemini from which they appear to radiate, the Geminidsor Gems for shortusually offer the best and brightest falling stars for skywatchers to see out of all the major annual meteor showers.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
4 hours ago

Mathematicians Crack a Fractal Conjecture on Chaos

Randomness and chaos, measured by Gaussian multiplicative chaos, can amplify tiny fluctuations into global effects; the Garban-Vargas conjecture formalizes and is now proved.
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fromThe Atlantic
1 hour ago

Day 9 of the 2025 Space Telescope Advent Calendar: A Cosmic Cat's Paw

The James Webb Space Telescope imaged a star-forming "toe beans" region in the Cat's Paw Nebula (NGC 6334), about 4,000 light-years away.
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fromArs Technica
2 hours ago

Pompeii construction site confirms recipe for Roman concrete

Ancient Romans used hot mixing with quicklime in concrete, producing self-healing properties confirmed by new sample analysis.
fromwww.theguardian.com
8 hours ago

Houseplant hacks: can grow lights help plants during winter?

The problem In the dark days of winter, the whole house is darker, days are shorter, skies are greyer and our tropical houseplants receive far less light than they would in their natural habitat. Leaves fade and growth slows as plants struggle to photosynthesise. The hack Grow lights offer a clever fix, topping up what nature can't provide. But with prices ranging from 15 to 100, are they really worth it?
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fromMail Online
6 hours ago

What the f***? Americans use the 'f-word' more frequently than Brits

Americans use the f-word most frequently, while Australians produce the widest and most creative range of f-word spelling variants on social media.
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fromNature
18 hours ago

A poetic ode to eddies and an earwig's brush with death

Eddy origins are immortalized in verse, and an earwig survived inside a vacuum tube; historical materials may contain offensive content.
#moon-snail
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fromKqed
2 hours ago

DRAFT: This Stick Insect Has a Peppermint-Scented Secret Weapon | Deep Look | KQED

Peppermint stick insects use plant-derived actinidine as a defensive spray from birth, combined with camouflage and evasive behavior to deter predators like ants.
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fromFuturism
23 hours ago

AI "Research" Papers Are Complete Slop, Experts Say

Proliferation of low-quality AI papers produced with large language models is flooding the field, making it difficult for high-quality research to be discovered.
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fromThe Atlantic
21 hours ago

Today's Atlantic Trivia: Illegal Woodblock in the Back

Building and practicing memory palaces preserves human memory and creativity as AI handles more cognitive tasks.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

This Technology Fights Fire with SoundNo Water Needed

Sound waves can suppress fires by displacing oxygen from fuel, with demonstrations reaching about 25 feet, though significant scaling challenges remain.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Tsunami Warnings Issued in Japan after Magnitude 7.6 Earthquake

A magnitude 7.6 earthquake struck off Japan's east coast, triggering tsunami warnings with observed waves up to 0.5 meters and evacuation orders; infrastructure disruptions reported.
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fromNature
1 day ago

9,000 metres under the sea: this researcher found the deepest animal ecosystems on Earth

A thriving hadal-zone ecosystem more than nine kilometres deep depends on chemosynthetic microbes fueled by methane, hydrogen sulfide and seep fluids, hosting likely new species.
fromNature
1 day ago

How the Royal Institution made science a seasonal spectacle

For science enthusiasts in the United Kingdom, the Christmas Lectures at the Royal Institution (RI) are as much a part of the season's celebration as are Christmas trees and carol singing. These iconic talks for a young audience, celebrating their 200th anniversary this year, have introduced many people to the delights of science through captivating demonstrations. Space scientist Maggie Aderin-Pocock is the next speaker to take to the floor, delivering this historic lecture series this week.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Hawaii's Kilauea Volcano Absolutely Destroys This Webcam in a Fiery New Video

Kilauea's summit lava fountains exceeded 1,000 feet, sending molten debris into a USGS webcam and occurring amid an intermittent eruption since December 23, 2024.
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fromwww.nature.com
1 day ago

Publisher Correction: CRISPR activation for SCN2A-related neurodevelopmental disorders

Figure 1b exon labels for the Scn2a allele were reversed (3 4 5) and have been corrected to the proper order (5 4 3) in HTML and PDF.
fromNews Center
1 day ago

Wireless Device 'Speaks' to the Brain With Light - News Center

The soft, flexible device sits under the scalp but on top of the skull, where it delivers precise patterns of light through the bone to activate neurons across the cortex. In experiments, scientists used the device's tiny, patterned bursts of light to activate specific populations of neurons deep inside the brains of mouse models. (These neurons are genetically modified to respond to light.) The mice quickly learned to interpret these patterns as meaningful signals, which they could recognize and use.
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fromNature
1 day ago

The visionary physicist who gave us a new way to view the cosmos

The Vera Rubin Observatory will rapidly image the southern sky with the world's largest digital camera to map dark matter, discover transient phenomena, and track hazardous asteroids.
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fromMail Online
23 hours ago

Hidden shafts beneath Egypt's pyramids are 'confirmed' by scientists

Radar-based Doppler tomography reportedly revealed a man-made network of helical shafts and enormous cubic chambers more than 3,500 feet beneath the Khafre pyramid.
fromNature
1 day ago

This scientist found a new trick of the immune system by digging through cellular rubbish

From her office at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, Israel, she holds up a blue plastic model of a proteasome, a barrel-shaped structure with a hollow core. The function seems simple: proteins enter the chamber, where they are shredded and then exit as smaller peptide fragments. But the machinery is surprisingly elaborate. The core comprises more than two dozen protein subunits and can associate with a variety of regulatory caps.
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fromBig Think
1 day ago

What Earth's most extreme places teach us about being human

Deep-ocean, high-mountain, and space exploration produce intense feelings of awe through extreme environments, sensory limits, and confronting vastness.
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fromBig Think
1 day ago

The LHC's best 2025 discovery points the way to new physics

Observation in 2025 that baryons exhibit CP-violation provides crucial evidence toward explaining the Universe's matter–antimatter asymmetry.
fromTheregister
1 day ago

Kyocera demos multi-gigabit comms for underwater drones

Kyocera has demonstrated underwater wireless optical communication (UWOC) technology that achieved 5.2 Gbps in lab tests, targeting video feeds and sensor data for ocean exploration and underwater robotics. The Japanese corp aims to enable real-time, large-volume data transmission for autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs) and drones used in marine surveys, structural inspections, and resource exploration. Underwater communication faces significant challenges: acoustic systems manage only a few Kbps, while radio frequency delivers a few Mbps at short range.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Can you solve it? The forgotten Dutch invention that created the modern world

Corneliszoon's sawmill, argues Davila, was mankind's first true industrial machine. A windmill turned a wheel. One component transformed the rotary motion into up-and-down motion for the cutting blade. Another component transformed the rotary motion into a sideway's motion feeding the log to the blade. A ratchet system moved the log forward one precise increment per cycle. Each element was modest on its own.
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fromFuturism
1 day ago

3I/ATLAS Is Carrying Ingredients for Life, NASA Finds

Interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS contains significant gaseous methanol and hydrogen cyanide, suggesting complex organic chemistry and origins in its rocky core.
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fromTechzine Global
1 day ago

Kyocera achieves 5.2Gbps wireless underwater communication

Kyocera's UWOC system achieves 5.2 Gbps short-range underwater optical communication using a customized PHY layer and over 1 GHz optical bandwidth.
fromThe Atlantic
1 day ago

The Rarest of All Diseases Are Becoming Treatable

For a decade after its discovery, CRISPR gene editing was stuck on the cusp of transforming medicine. Then, in 2023, scientists started using it on sickle-cell disease, and Victoria Gray, a patient who lived with constant pain-like lightning inside her body, she has said -got the first-ever FDA-approved CRISPR gene-editing treatment. Her symptoms vanished; so did virtually everyone else's in the clinical trial she was a part of.
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fromNature
1 day ago

How to get science back into policymaking

Scientific evidence and its role in policymaking face erosion from funding cuts, misinformation, and misunderstanding, requiring researchers and institutions to rebuild public and political trust.
fromNature
1 day ago

Home-field advantage: how local research leads to new discoveries

The Cradle of Humankind is a complex system of limestone caves that has the world's highest concentration of ancient human fossils. It's located about 50 kilometres northwest of Johannesburg, South Africa. When I started working there as a PhD student ten years ago, I never thought that I would be the person making discoveries. I always saw myself as a support person who helped the palaeontologists and archaeologists.
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fromPortland Monthly
21 hours ago

This Portland-Made Game Is a Crash Course in Animal Sex

Sisters created Mate, a Kickstarter-funded party game that teaches animal mating behaviors and sexual anatomy through trivia, drawing, measurement, and image challenges.
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fromThe Atlantic
1 day ago

Day 8 of the 2025 Space Telescope Advent Calendar: Sculpted by Stellar Winds

Hot, blue stars in NGC 346 sculpt cavities in the surrounding nebula through stellar winds, revealed by combined Hubble infrared, optical, and ultraviolet observations.
fromNew York Family
1 day ago

Impact: The End of the Age of Dinosaurs now at AMNH - New York Family

66 million years ago, a giant asteroid hit the earth at a whopping 45,000 miles per hour and changed the course of life on our planet. Today, the American Museum of Natural History is telling the story in a fascinating and educational new exhibit called "Impact: The End of the Age of Dinosaurs." Impact transports visitors to a time before, during and after the catastrophic event occurred via interactive installments, immersive videos and realistic displays.
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fromMail Online
1 day ago

NASA's Perseverance Rover finds evidence of tropical rainfall on Mars

Scientists at Purdue University in Indiana have analysed photos of fragments of bleached clay, found by NASA's Perseverance rover. The fragments - which range from pebbles to boulders - suggest the Red Planet was warm and wet for millions of years. In fact, Mars may have been like the tropical regions of Earth such as the Amazon rainforest of South America and the Guinean Forests of West Africa. And they offer further evidence that the planet once had the right conditions to support life.
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fromMail Online
1 day ago

El Nino is set to become substantially STRONGER and more frequent

Human-caused warming will make El Niño events stronger and more frequent, leading to more intense, regular global impacts including climate whiplash.
fromThe Mercury News
1 day ago

How a local 'sea monster' spawned a century of myth, mystery and scientific discovery

In May 1925, a strange decaying corpse washed ashore on Moore's Beach, now known as Natural Bridges State Beach, in Santa Cruz. Locals who swarmed out to investigate the specimen described elephantine legs, a fish-like tail and a long neck stretched across the sand. It was quickly dubbed a sea monster. Photographs published at the time reveal that much of the monster's carcass had collapsed, leaving only the head mostly intact. Its eyes were small, its forehead bulbous; its jaws formed a duck-like beak. Sensational accounts were plastered across newspapers from California to Texas.
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fromThe New Yorker
1 day ago

Oliver Sacks Put Himself Into His Case Studies. What Was the Cost?

Oliver Sacks linked healing to storytelling, using narrative to shape patients' experiences and at times reshape their reality.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Chernobyl's Shield Guarding Radioactive Elephant's Foot Has Been Damaged for Months

The New Safe Confinement at Chernobyl was damaged by a Russian drone strike and remains unrepaired for ten months while outside radiation levels appear steady.
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fromFuturism
2 days ago

There's Something Very Weird About Blue Origin's Device That Generates Electricity From Moon Dust

TEAREX proposes storing daytime lunar heat in regolith to power habitats through 14-day lunar nights using AI-designed thermal "battery" technology.
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fromFuturism
2 days ago

Passenger Jet Suddenly Dropped From Sky for a Wild Reason, Airbus Says

Cosmic-ray-induced single-event upsets can flip computer memory bits, disrupting aircraft systems and causing abrupt, dangerous flight control anomalies and passenger injuries.
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fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Creativity Might Be the New Longevity Tool for Your Brain

Regular creative engagement and expertise in dance, music, art, or strategy gaming is associated with brains that appear five to seven years biologically younger.
fromwww.psychologytoday.com
2 days ago

Who Sharks Really Are and Why Monster Myths Must Be Shelved

When people replace the monster myth with ecological truth, they see sharks not as threats, but as marvels. Cultural narratives about sharks stands in the way of conservationfear drives policymyth drives management. Knowledge dissolves fear, compassion replaces misunderstanding, and empathy leads to protection. Sharks are fascinating animals with a range of personalities. They suffer from numerous misleading stereotypes and myths and instill fear in many people who so much as think about them.1 However, shark attacks on people are actually rare.2
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fromFuturism
2 days ago

Kim Kardashian's Doctor Finds Holes in Her Brain, Signs of "Low Activity"

Now, in a recent episode of "The Kardashians " her doctor told her that she has "holes" in her brain, based on recent scans, which are related to "low activity" and caused by chronic stress. Don't necessarily take it at face value. In a recent piece for The Conversation, Curtin University neurology senior research fellow Sarah Hellewell warned that there's little merit to the tech used by Kardashian's physician, and that we should take his diagnosis with a massive grain of salt.
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fromDesign You Trust - Design Daily Since 2007
2 days ago

Spectacular Winning Images of the Royal Society Publishing Photography Competition 2025

The 2025 Royal Society Publishing Photography Competition revealed scientific wonders through striking images spanning Astronomy, Behaviour, Earth Science, Ecology, and Microimaging.
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fromwww.npr.org
1 day ago

Light from satellites will ruin majority of some space telescope images, study says

Reflections from the growing number of satellites will contaminate and could ruin over 95% of images from some space telescopes within the next decade.
fromFlowingData
4 days ago

Geologic map of the United States' surface

The Earth's Surface geology layer depicts geologic units exposed at the Earth's surface in the conterminous United States, ranging in age from Quaternary glacial deposits and alluvium to Precambrian crystalline bedrock. In the U.S. West and Southeast, the map is a composite of 29 state geologic maps depicting geology at the Earth's surface. In the glaciated region of the Midwest and Northeast, the map is a composite of 21 state geologic maps depicting pre-Quaternary rocks ("bedrock"), 8 state geologic maps depicting Quaternary deposits, and 18 USGS Quaternary Atlas Series maps depicting Quaternary deposits. The Quaternary Atlas maps were used where modern state geologic maps were not available.
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fromThe Atlantic
2 days ago

Day 7 of the 2025 Space Telescope Advent Calendar: A Warped View Through an Einstein Ring

ESA / Webb, NASA & CSA, G. Mahler Day 7 of the 2025 Space Telescope Advent Calendar: A Warped View Through an Einstein Ring. You are seeing two galaxies here, one in front of the other. The more distant spiral galaxy appears warped and distorted due to the gravitational lensing occurring around a massive, much closer galaxy, which is part of galaxy cluster SMACSJ0028.2-7537.
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fromMail Online
2 days ago

Is YOUR Christmas tree gaudy? Tool reveals how many baubles to use

A formula calculates ideal numbers and proportions of baubles, lights, tinsel, and topper size from tree height to prevent over-decoration.
from24/7 Wall St.
3 days ago

The Most Advanced Military Planes Have Amazing Capabilities

Modern military aircraft reflect some of humanity's most sophisticated engineering achievements in the world. These planes combine cutting-edge technology, effective design, and top-of-the-line performance. They're built not only to fly faster and farther than ever before but also to accomplish a variety of other tasks, like gather intelligence, evade detection, and carry out specific missions. Today's incredibly built craft are a testament to true innovation, from stealth fighters that remain invisible on radar to surveillance aircraft that can track threats with precision.
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#extremophiles
fromwww.mercurynews.com
3 days ago

Local butterfly trackers hope bluetooth tech can unlock secrets of monarch migration

For the first time in California, citizen scientists like Hernandez can join the effort to track monarch butterflies thanks to Blu+, a new generation of ultra-light tags that communicate using Bluetooth technology. Through the Project Monarch app, available for iPhone or Android, anyone with a smartphone can assist researchers in monitoring migration patterns by scanning their surroundings. If a Blu+ tagged butterfly flutters within a 100-yard range, the phone detects the signal and uploads data to a central database.
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fromIndependent
3 days ago

Luke O'Neill: Dogs on cannabis, drunk racoons and dancing monkeys - how our animal friends cut loose

From monkeys beating out musical rhythms to dogs on CBD, we're seeing some truly hedonistic behaviour
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 days ago

Scientists Say Reheated Pizza Can Reduce Blood Sugar SpikesHere's How

Cooling starchy foods like pizza below 40°F forms resistant starches that resist digestion, reduce blood sugar spikes, and act as dietary fiber.
fromFuturism
3 days ago

SpaceX Is Now Threatening the Hubble, NASA Warns

Numerous stories have been written about the growing swarm of Starlink satellites in low earth orbit (LEO) over the past few years, as astronomers grow increasingly worried about the crafts' impact on their observation equipment. Launched by Elon Musk's SpaceX, each satellite has the potential to disrupt astronomy through both radio emissions and light pollution - and as the number of satellites grows, so too does the amount of interference. Now, a new study by researchers at NASA is warning that obstructions caused by SpaceX and other private satellite companies are becoming so severe that not even the Hubble Space Telescope is safe.
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fromThe Atlantic
3 days ago

Day 6 of the 2025 Space Telescope Advent Calendar: The Shell of a Dying Star

Binary star in planetary nebula NGC 1514, 1,500 light-years away, has been shedding gas and dust for over 4,000 years, illuminating its shell.
fromwww.dw.com
3 days ago

New discovery: The 'sacred boundary' surrounding Stonehenge DW 12/06/2025

Some 4,500 years ago, people dug a series of deep, wide pits in the area near Durrington Walls in southern England. They were gemometrically arranged, forming a 2-kilometer (1.2-mile) wide circle that enclosed over three square kilometers (1.16 square miles). Long mistaken for naturally occuring features, the circle of human-made shafts has now come to be understood as a colossal project that lends new dimensions to the Stonehenge landscape.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 days ago

Have Astronomers Found the True Star of Bethlehem'?

Astronomers have long sought a cosmic explanation for the Bible's Star of Bethlehem, the shining celestial object that, so the story goes, guided the wise men, or magi, from Jerusalem to greet the baby Jesus. One long-standing hypothesis held that the Star of Bethlehem was in fact a conjunction, perhaps between Jupiter and Saturn. But this holiday season, a scientist has presented a new contender: a comet.
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fromArs Technica
4 days ago

Rocket Report: Blunder at Baikonur; do launchers really need rocket engines?

The Department of the Air Force approved a Florida site as a new home for SpaceX's Starship.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
4 days ago

China Tried to Land a Reusable Rocket. It Exploded. The Bigger Story Is What Comes Next

Reusable rockets have transformed orbital launch dominance, with SpaceX leading while competitors like Blue Origin and LandSpace show mixed progress and occasional failures.
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

Why Thoughts Have Power

The emerging consensus is striking-the mind does not merely interpret reality; it actively participates in shaping it. Across research on the placebo effect, athletic peak performance, and self-fulfilling prophecies, a consistent pattern appears: what we expect, believe, and even feel profoundly alters how we experience the world. Put differently, the mind is not a passive observer. It is a predictive, generative, reality-filtering system-one that continually constructs the lens through which we live our daily experiences.
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fromNature
4 days ago

These are a few of my favourite sounds: Books in brief

Cosmic background radiation, diverse bat biology and cognition, natural soundscapes, and modern charlatanism amplified by internet-era technologies and corporate incentives.
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fromBig Think
4 days ago

Ask Ethan: Can we ever observe a proton decaying?

Proton stability is unproven; experiments place its lifetime beyond 10^34 years, requiring enormous, ultra-sensitive detectors to observe potential rare decays.
fromMail Online
4 days ago

Unravelling the mystery of the giant 'scar' that cuts across Scotland

Priceless rock extracted from Scotland's legendary Great Glen Fault could help answer 'fundamental questions about the history of the Earth'. Experts at the British Geological Survey say the extracted core sample - essentially rock pulled from Earth using a hollow drill - measures a total of about 5,000 feet. It has been taken from more than 2,000 feet below ground level along the Great Glen Fault, which stretches from Norway through Scotland to Ireland.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
4 days ago

Scientists Saw an Earthquake in Incredible DetailUsing Telecom Cables

The same optic fibers that pulse with the world's Internet traffic are now listening to the pulse of the planet, picking up earthquake tremors in better detail than traditional seismic networks do. In a recent Science study, researchers used 15 kilometers of telecom fiber near Mendocino, Calif., to record the region's biggest earthquake in five yearscapturing in fine detail how the magnitude 7 rupture started, slowed and sped up, accelerating even faster than the speed of sound.
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fromMail Online
4 days ago

Is life out there? NASA finds essential sugars on asteroid Bennu

Essential sugars including ribose and glucose were detected on asteroid Bennu, indicating molecular building blocks of life were present across the early solar system.
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fromenglish.elpais.com
4 days ago

Conspiracies, flat-earth theories, and microchipped vaccines: How our experiences fuel impossible beliefs

People form extraordinary beliefs because personal experiences lead them to conclude those beliefs are true, in the same way ordinary beliefs are formed.
fromMail Online
4 days ago

Logan Paul caught in UFO mystery after sightings of 'orb' light appear

Paul shared a video with his 6.4million followers on X Thursday night, showing a mysterious bright orb hovering over Puerto Rico on December 3. A member of Paul's business team claimed to have witnessed the unidentified object flying over a local marina on the island before shooting up into space and leaving a visible streak in the sky as it disappeared, the X post stated.
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fromMail Online
3 days ago

Clothing tycoon vows to 'give away' company for proof Earth is flat

The billionaire CEO of the Columbia Sportswear Company has just made anyone who believes the Earth is flat an opportunity of a lifetime. Tim Boyle, 76, announced a new competition on Tuesday, which challenged 'flat Earthers' to find the actual edge of the planet and bring back a picture of the abyss that sits beyond. Boyle, who is worth an estimated $1.6billion, said the reward for their world-changing discovery would be the control of his $3billion family business, which was founded in 1938.
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#glyphosate
fromFast Company
3 days ago
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An influential article that called Monsanto's Roundup safe for humans has been retracted 25 years later

fromFast Company
3 days ago
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An influential article that called Monsanto's Roundup safe for humans has been retracted 25 years later

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fromMail Online
4 days ago

Minneapolis was colder than MARS last month

An Arctic cold front and polar vortex are causing record-low temperatures across parts of the central and eastern United States, briefly colder than Mars.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
4 days ago

Do Objects Always Appear Smaller with Distance? Not on Cosmic Scales!

If you're on the surface of Earthand I'm betting you arethere are many ways to reliably estimate the distance to some object. One we use almost subconsciously is to compare an object's apparent size with how big we know it to be. For example, you have a good feel for the size of, say, a typical human. So if you see someone looming large in your vision, you can reckon they're nearby, whereas if they appear very small, they must be much farther away.
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fromThe Atlantic
4 days ago

Day 5 of the 2025 Space Telescope Advent Calendar: Colorful Stars of All Ages

Spiral galaxy NGC 6000, about 100 million light-years away and 66,600 light-years across, shows older yellow central stars and younger blue outer-arm stars.
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fromHigh Country News
4 days ago

Get to know the western spotted skunk - High Country News

Western spotted skunks are small, nocturnal carnivores widespread in western North American forests, requiring targeted monitoring and habitat protection to prevent declines.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

How many spiders and pseudoscorpions does it take to make one of the world's greatest taxonomists?

Mark Harvey has described over 1,000 new species of arachnids and other invertebrates through museum research and global fieldwork.
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fromMail Online
4 days ago

Professional Santas are now young, skinny, and female, study finds

Modern Santa performers increasingly include younger people, women, skinny individuals, and diverse backgrounds, showing that most anyone can successfully embody Santa.
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fromFuncheap
5 days ago

Astronomy on Tap San Francisco

Free monthly bar-based astronomy talks offering accessible space science, audience Q&A, and a 1–2 drink minimum.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
5 days ago

Can We Image Alien Earths? This Newfound Object Could Show the Way

Astronomers have found what could become the first target for a crucial test of NASA's upcoming Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope, a soon-to-launch observatory that serves as a pathfinder mission for discovering Earthlike worlds around other stars. In a pair of new studies, an international research team has revealed two newfound objects around nearby stars: a gas-giant exoplanet orbiting the star HIP 54515 and a brown dwarf around the star HIP 71618.
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fromTheregister
5 days ago

We'll beat China to the Moon, NASA nominee declares

The US must return astronauts to the Moon before China mounts its first crewed landing there, NASA administrator nominee Jared Isaacman predicted on Wednesday.
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fromFast Company
5 days ago

You're reading this story thanks to decades of space exploration-but that's exactly why policies need to change

Space exploration yields long-term technological, economic, security, and scientific benefits and requires policy to manage orbital traffic, debris, and competing interests.
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