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fromwww.theguardian.com
9 hours ago

After I burned out, physics helped me understand what had happened to me and to move on | Zahaan Bharmal

Economic crises often arise from small, seemingly innocuous failures that can snowball into major disruptions, undermining predictable cause-and-effect expectations.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 hours ago

Primordial Particle Soup Is Hottest Matter Ever Created on Earth at 3.3 Trillion Degrees

Scientists at RHIC created quark-gluon plasma from colliding gold nuclei and for the first time accurately measured its temperature, making the hottest matter on Earth.
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fromFuturism
6 hours ago

Harvard Astronomer Says Mysterious Interstellar Object May Be Blasting Its Thrusters to Get Away From Us as Fast as Possible

Interstellar object 3I/ATLAS, likely a carbon-dioxide ice comet, survived perihelion intact and displays jets and an anti-tail; some suggest possible technological thrusters.
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fromFuturism
6 hours ago

Scientists Discover That the Universe Is Getting Worse and Worse

The universe has passed its peak; star formation is declining and will eventually cease, leading to an increasingly cold, dark, and lifeless cosmos.
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fromScienceDaily
13 hours ago

CRISPR brings back ancient gene that prevents gout and fatty liver

Restoring the ancient uricase gene in human cells via CRISPR reduces uric acid levels, offering potential treatment for gout and metabolic diseases.
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Snakes, sheilas and a backblocks shed: the school teaching how to wrangle Australia's most venomous reptiles

Snake-handling courses train novices to catch and bag venomous Australian snakes, including the inland taipan, with strict safety rules and rising popularity.
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fromArs Technica
5 hours ago

Wyoming dinosaur mummies give us a new view of duck-billed species

Multiple exquisitely preserved Edmontosaurus mummies with skin and soft-tissue impressions reveal accurate external anatomy, including scale size and tail spike arrangement.
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from24/7 Wall St.
1 day ago

Nuclear Stock Oklo Hits Major Milestone. Is It Enough to Buy?

Oklo secured rapid DOE approval for its Aurora fuel-fabrication safety design, advancing SMR commercialization and attracting investor interest tied to AI energy needs.
Science
fromArs Technica
1 day ago

Rocket Report: Blue Origin's stunning success; vive le Baguette One!

Blue Origin's New Glenn achieved a successful reusable first-stage landing, while Galactic Energy's Ceres-1 suffered a fourth-stage failure, losing three payloads.
Science
fromPsychology Today
19 hours ago

What Scientists Are Doing With Games

Games and gamification are being used across education, medicine, and science to increase engagement and deliver therapeutic interventions with promising research outcomes.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
22 hours ago

Can NASA Outsource Its Space Science? This Mars-Bound Mission May Show the Way

ESCAPADE, a low-cost twin-orbiter Mars mission launched on New Glenn, tests mapping Mars–solar wind interactions and a commercialized, under-$100M science model.
Science
frominsideevs.com
20 hours ago

Sodium-Ion Batteries Have Landed In America. Now Comes The Hard Part

Peak Energy and Jupiter Power will deploy grid-scale sodium-ion batteries offering lower degradation, strong cold performance, passive cooling and lower cost but reduced energy density.
fromArs Technica
20 hours ago

The twin probes just launched toward Mars have an Easter egg on board

"There are also two name plates (one in blue and one in gold) on each spacecraft listing Rocket Lab team members who've contributed to the mission, making it possible to get to Mars," said McLaurin. Mounted on the solar panels, the plaques use shading to also display the Latin initials (NSHO) of the Rocket Lab motto and form the company's logo. Despite their diminutive size, each plate appears to include more than 200 names, including founder, president, and CEO Peter Beck.
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fromNature
1 day ago

Spaceport mementos

An unauthorized ship from Tremulos docks carrying a single Tremulo child; spaceport controllers and security must manage an unexpected contact with clonal aliens.
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fromNature
1 day ago

Who will fill the climate-data void left by the Trump administration?

US removal from IPCC participation and deep federal cuts are eroding national climate-science capacity, jeopardizing monitoring, modelling and emergency weather warnings.
Science
fromTechzine Global
1 day ago

Once again, DeepSeek suggests AI can be done much more efficiently

Feeding LLMs images of words (pixels) enables far more efficient processing, reducing model size, data footprint, and compute compared with raw word sequences.
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fromNature
1 day ago

Why I moved my research to China from Germany: a biologist's experience

China is actively recruiting top scientists, offering flexible, non-permanent appointments and resources that attract established researchers like Wolfgang Baumeister to continue their work there.
#blue-origin
fromScienceDaily
1 day ago

Scientists uncover a hidden limit inside human endurance

When ultra-runners prepare for races that span hundreds of miles and last for days, they are not only challenging their determination and physical power. They are also exploring how far human physiology can be pushed. In a study published October 20 in the Cell Press journal Current Biology, researchers reported that even elite endurance athletes cannot consistently exceed an average "metabolic ceiling" equal to 2.5 times their basal metabolic rate (BMR) in daily energy use.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
18 hours ago

Scientists Unearth Mysterious Meteorite Crater in China

A 900-meter Jinlin crater in China likely formed by a meteorite in the early-to-mid Holocene, but its age remains uncertain and needs more dating.
fromNature
1 day ago

A guide to the Nature Index

To glean a country's, territory's, region's or an institution's contribution to an article, and to ensure that they are not counted more than once, the Nature Index uses Share, a fractional count that takes into account the share of authorship on each article. The total Share available per article is 1, which is shared among all authors under the assumption that each contributed equally.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
22 hours ago

Sun Continues Celestial Fireworks Display with Powerful Solar Flare

AR4274 produced an X4.0-class solar flare and CME that may trigger auroras and could return toward Earth within a 27-day solar rotation.
Science
from24/7 Wall St.
1 day ago

This is the Only Quantum Computing Stock You Should Buy

IBM's established revenues and profits position it to lead quantum computing investment, unlike speculative startups with minimal revenue and volatile valuations.
Science
fromNature
1 day ago

The leading cities in the world for high-quality research in 2024

Chinese cities increased research output and dominated multiple subject rankings in 2024 while US cities' adjusted Share among top 10 cities declined.
#amazon-leo
fromFuturism
1 day ago

Astonishing Photo Shows Man Skydiving Through Sun

Arizona-based amateur astronomer Andrew McCarthy shared the now-viral image on Reddit, calling it the "most preposterously fake-looking real photo I've ever captured." The gorgeous image, fittingly titled "The Fall of Icarus" - and which you can buy as a print to support McCarthy right here - shows "my friend transiting an active region on the Sun in freefall," he wrote in the caption.
Science
fromDefector
22 hours ago

Jeffrey Epstein Was The Unofficial Advice Columnist For The Elites | Defector

Ever since it was disclosed that financier Leon Black had paid Jeffrey Epstein over $150 million for tax and estate planning in 2014, six years after the latter pleaded guilty to child prostitution charges, I have been fascinated by the notion that the disgraced sex offender, who made little outward intellectual contribution to the world, had all these highly valuable forms of expertise. Many powerful people have claimed that Epstein was some sort of charismatic polymath.
Science
fromMail Online
1 day ago

Stranded Chinese astronauts finally escape station... but at a cost

However, that decision has now left the crew of Shenzhou-21, astronauts Zhang Lu, Wu Fei, and Zhang Hongzhang without a vessel to return to Earth in case of another space emergency. On Friday, the China Manned Space Agency (CMSA) announced that the Shenzhou-22 spacecraft will be launched 'at an appropriate time in the future,' with the likely goal of bringing replacements for the Shenzhou-21 team.
Science
fromwww.nature.com
1 day ago

Author Correction: Mechanisms of stretch-mediated skin expansion at single-cell resolution

In the version of the article initially published, in Extended Data Fig. 10e, the immunohistochemistry staining for FOSL1 on the treated sample (Trametinib) contained incorrect data that were identical to those shown in Fig. 3d but acquired at different magnification. This mistake was due to an error in saving the image under the wrong name following its microscopic acquisition. Figure 1 in the Supplementary Information accompanying this amendment shows the original and corrected Extended Data Fig. 10e.
fromArs Technica
1 day ago

US spy satellites built by SpaceX send signals in the "wrong direction"

About 170 Starshield satellites built by SpaceX for the US government's National Reconnaissance Office (NRO) have been sending signals in the wrong direction, a satellite researcher found. The SpaceX-built spy satellites are helping the NRO greatly expand its satellite surveillance capabilities, but the purpose of these signals is unknown. The signals are sent from space to Earth in a frequency band that's allocated internationally for Earth-to-space and space-to-space transmissions. There have been no public complaints of interference caused by the surprising Starshield emissions.
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fromMail Online
1 day ago

Blue Origin launches a NASA spacecraft to Mars as space race heats up

NASA's Artemis program will return astronauts to the Moon, including the first woman and Victor Glover as the first Black deep-space astronaut, by 2026–2028.
Science
fromArs Technica
23 hours ago

Three astronauts are stuck on China's space station without a safe ride home

Damaged Shenzhou 20 forced crew to return aboard newer Shenzhou 21; Shenzhou 20 remains in orbit for experiments while Shenzhou 22 will launch later.
Science
fromTheregister
1 day ago

Shenzhou-20 crew rides Shenzhou-21 home after debris strike

Debris cracked Shenzhou-20's viewport, rendering it unsafe and prompting the Shenzhou-21 crew's return and likely an uncrewed Shenzhou-22 launch.
Science
fromTime Out London
1 day ago

The Science Museum is opening a new gallery in 2028 - all about iconic inventions

Kensington's Science Museum will reopen its Making the Modern World gallery in 2028 as Ages of Invention: The Serum Institute Gallery following an eight-figure donation.
Science
fromWIRED
1 day ago

Can a Hydroelectric Dam Really Make the Days Longer?

The Three Gorges Dam redistributed water to higher elevation, increasing Earth's moment of inertia and slightly slowing rotation, lengthening Earth's day by microseconds.
fromTravel + Leisure
22 hours ago

This Arctic Yacht Trip Lets You View the 2026 Total Solar Eclipse Amid Glaciers and Wildlife-Joined by a NASA Legend

When a swathe of Europe goes dark for over two minutes during next summer's total solar eclipse, some lucky travelers will be able to watch the shadow of the moon sweep across a landscape of glaciers from the deck of their explorer yacht. That's thanks to expedition yacht charter specialists EYOS Expeditions, which unveiled a one-of-a-kind opportunity to charter a yacht to witness the eclipse on Aug. 12, 2026, from one of the world's most untamed wildernesses: East Greenland's Scoresby Sund.
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fromInsideHook
1 day ago

The Galapagos Expedition That Might Challenge Your Views

The Galapagos archipelago's volcanic origin and island isolation produced unique evolutionary experiments that host iconic species and prompted profound personal and scientific change.
#ancient-rna
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
23 hours ago

We Had a Name for Galaxies' before We Knew They Existed

Like any scientific field, it has its own jargon and buzzwordsand terms with meanings that can be not only odd but downright counterintuitive. The most obvious one is astronomers' use of the word metal to mean any element heavier than helium. Lithium? Metal. Oxygen? Metal. Carbon? That's a metal, too, as far as astronomy is concerned. Using a single term to cover these heavier-than-helium elements.
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fromBig Think
1 day ago

Ask Ethan: How can we better measure G, the gravitational constant?

Measuring the gravitational constant G precisely is extremely challenging on Earth; space offers theoretical advantages but practical, near-term space measurements are unlikely.
Science
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Brain Cleaning in Progress...

Sleep-loss–related attentional lapses trigger brainwide state changes that drive cerebrospinal-fluid–mediated cleansing, protecting the brain from damage caused by lost sleep.
Science
fromMail Online
1 day ago

The real Atlantis? Scientists discover traces of a submerged city

Underwater archaeological remains of a medieval commercial city, including burial ground, fired-brick structures, millstones, and ceramics, were found beneath Lake Issyk Kul in Kyrgyzstan.
Science
fromThe Washington Post
1 day ago

First, the frogs died. Then people got sick.

Declines in frog populations reduce tadpoles that eat mosquito larvae, contributing to increased mosquito-borne malaria and revealing frogs' role in disease regulation.
fromHarvard Gazette
21 hours ago

Solving mystery at tip of South America - Harvard Gazette

We found this new lineage, a new group of people we didn't know about before, that has persisted as the main ancestry component for at least the last 8,000 years up to the present day.
Science
#dog-domestication
Science
fromFast Company
21 hours ago

What time do the 2025 Leonids peak? Here's when to see a meteor shower light up the night sky this weekend

The 2025 Leonid meteor shower will peak Nov 16–17 with up to 15 meteors per hour, visible in both hemispheres under mostly dark skies.
Science
fromArs Technica
2 days ago

What would a "simplified" Starship plan for the Moon actually look like?

NASA and SpaceX must find mutually acceptable simplified Starship plans to accelerate Artemis III without major hardware changes.
Science
fromArs Technica
1 day ago

Tiny chips hitch a ride on immune cells to sites of inflammation

Microscopic cell-hybrid electronic devices can be injected into the bloodstream and self-implant in brain regions, enabling wireless, less invasive brain interfaces.
Science
fromState of the Planet
1 day ago

Continuing on to Comilla, Dhaka and the Coast

Repairing GNSS stations across eastern Bangladesh involved travel delays, administrative hurdles, and quick on-site fixes amid military presence and local hospitality.
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

Stunning aurora australis lights up sky above New Zealand and Australia after cannibal' solar storm

A cannibal solar storm produced intense auroras across Australia, New Zealand and the UK, reaching G4–G5 geomagnetic conditions and record UK geoelectric levels.
Science
fromNature
2 days ago

The US government shutdown is over: what's next for scientists

A 43-day US government shutdown ended on 12 November; science agencies will reopen, staff will receive back pay, rehired personnel return, and grant activity restarts.
Science
fromNature
2 days ago

Tiny robots swim through blood, deliver drugs - and then dissolve

Remote-controlled, biodegradable microrobots can navigate blood vessels to deliver drugs to targeted sites and then dissolve, reducing systemic toxicity.
Science
fromwww.nature.com
2 days ago

Chinese Expedition Reveals Unexplored Section of Mysterious Arctic Ocean Ridge

Chinese-led deep-submersible exploration of the eastern Gakkel Ridge reached 5,277 metres, found potential hydrothermal vents, and collected samples for years of analysis.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

Dangerous Rogue Waves Aren't RandomThey're Predictable

Under a hazy gray sky on the first day of 1995, the Draupner natural gas platform in the North Sea was struck by something that had long been relegated to maritime folklore: an 84-foot wall of water that hurled massive equipment across the deck and warped steel supports. The Draupner wave provided the first hard evidence that rogue waves were very real.
Science
fromTheregister
2 days ago

Blue Origin New Glenn rocket launch scrubbed twice

A blast from the Sun kept Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket on the pad as the Northern Lights forced NASA to halt the launch. It has not been a good week for Jeff Bezos' rocket. A planned launch on November 9 was scrubbed due to weather, and the Blue Origin team had hoped to get the New Glenn off the pad on November 12, but it was not to be. While skywatchers were admiring an aurora, NASA scientists were fretting about the effects of the solar storm.
Science
fromFuncheap
2 days ago

Rare Showing of "Northern Lights" May Dazzle Bay Area Skies Tonight (Nov. 12)

Heads up, Bay Area. The Northern Lights are back. After lighting up skies across Novato, Petaluma, Santa Rosa, and San Rafael last night, the aurora borealis could return tonight (Wednesday, Nov. 12) thanks to a rare geomagnetic storm. When to look: 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. (best around midnight)Where: Look north and find a dark spot away from city lights.
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#geomagnetic-storm
fromsfist.com
1 day ago

3.6M Earthquake Rumbles Under Vallejo, Follows Earlier Swarm of Quakes

According to the US Geological Survey, a 3.6M earthquake rumbled just south of Vallejo Thursday afternoon, and miled shaking was felt in San Francisco, the East Bay, and parts of the North Bay. The earthquake appears to have occurred along the Southampton Fault, which appears like a northern extension of the Calaveras Fault a fault running under the East Bay and down to Hollister, just east of the Hayward Fault.
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fromNature
2 days ago

James Watson obituary: co-discoverer of DNA's double helix who reshaped modern biology

James D. Watson co-discovered DNA's double helix, advanced molecular biology and education, led major institutions, and faced later controversy over remarks about race.
Science
fromMail Online
2 days ago

Scientists decode secret language of non-human intelligence in oceans

Sperm whales produce structured, vowel-like codas with controlled pitch, length, and grammar-like patterns that closely resemble aspects of human speech.
fromFast Company
1 day ago

Neuroscience research says your next anti-aging product should be Duolingo

Researchers used what's known as the biobehavioral aging clock framework to quantify biobehavioral age gaps (BBAGs), by using artificial intelligence (AI) models trained on thousands of health and behavioral profiles. These models can predict a person's biological age based on physical markers such as hypertension, diabetes, sleep problems, and sensory loss, as well as protective factors including education, cognition, functional ability, and physical activity.
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fromMail Online
2 days ago

Shocking evidence reveals what interstellar visitor 3I/ATLAS really is

Interstellar object 3I/ATLAS survived perihelion intact and displays an anti-tail plus opposing giant jets inconsistent with natural comet behavior, suggesting a possible artificial origin.
from24/7 Wall St.
1 day ago

Aerial Superiority: Inside the U.S. Army's Cutting-Edge Aviation Fleet

The U.S. Army is entering a new era of aviation defined by speed and advanced technology. From the upgraded AH-64E Apache Guardian to next-generation systems like the Future Attack Reconnaissance Aircraft (FARA) and the CH-47F Chinook Block II, the Army's newest aircraft are built to dominate on the battlefield. These are just two of the platforms that the Army is pushing going forward; however, there are still legacy platforms that see the sky with a storied service history.
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fromMail Online
2 days ago

Diver breaks world record by plunging 56 metres under ice

Waldemar Bruderer set a world record by free-diving 56 metres beneath -1°C ice without fins or a wetsuit in Lake Sils.
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

Did Hitler really have a micropenis'? The dubious documentary analysing the dictator's DNA

If a TV programme sets about sequencing the genome of Adolf Hitler the person in modern history who comes closest to a universally agreed-upon personification of evil there are at the very least two questions you want the producers to ask themselves. First: is it possible? And second, the Jurassic Park question: just because scientists can, should they? Channel 4's two-part documentary Hitler's DNA: Blueprint of a Dictator is not the first time the self-consciously edgy British broadcaster has gone there.
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fromBig Think
2 days ago

Light and gravity travel at the same speed, but don't arrive together

Gravitational waves and light travel at identical speeds; the observed two-second arrival difference arises from emission-timing and source-process differences, not faster propagation.
Science
fromDefector
2 days ago

Drop Whatever You're Doing Right This Instant, There's Big Spider Web News | Defector

A subterranean spider web in Sulfur Cave spans half a tennis court and hosts at least 111,000 spiders, representing the largest known spider web.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

What Causes Cancer? Maud Slye Thought She Had the answer and a Way to Stop It

Maud Slye concluded cancer susceptibility is hereditary after breeding tens of thousands of mice, but she made critical mistakes and provoked opponents.
fromMail Online
2 days ago

Neanderthals NEVER truly went extinct, study claims

Scientists have long speculated what caused the downfall of the Neanderthals, but a new study suggests they never truly went extinct at all. Scientists in Italy and Switzerland claim the ancient group of archaic humans didn't experience a 'true extinction' because their DNA exists in people today. Over as little as 10,000 years, our species, Homo sapeins, mated and produced offspring with Neanderthals as part of a gradual 'genetic assimilation'.
Science
fromArs Technica
2 days ago

Tracking the winds that have turned Mars into a planet of dust

Where does all this dust come from? It's thought to be the result of erosion caused by the winds. Because the Martian atmosphere is so thin, dust particles can be difficult to move, but larger particles can become more easily airborne if winds are turbulent enough, later taking smaller dust motes with them. Perseverance and previous Mars rovers have mostly witnessed wind vortices that were associated with either dust devils or convection, during which warm air rises.
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fromNature
5 days ago

Daily briefing: The complex legacy of James Watson

James Watson transformed modern biology through the DNA discovery and leadership but later became a pariah due to racist and sexist public statements.
Science
fromHarvard Gazette
2 days ago

A potential quantum leap - Harvard Gazette

A conceptually scalable, fault-tolerant quantum computing architecture was demonstrated that detects and corrects errors across 448 atomic qubits.
fromNature
3 days ago

Huge eruption on a distant star confirmed at last

Researchers have detected what they say is the strongest evidence yet of a coronal mass ejection (CME) coming from a star other than our Sun. CMEs are massive bursts of fast-moving plasma that can be detected thanks to the characteristic radio signal they produce. However, despite decades of searching, these signals have only been identified from the Sun. Now a team has identified a similar signal coming from a distant star in the Milky Way.
Science
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