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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
7 hours ago

U.S. physicists have bid farewell to the nation's last remaining particle collider, which spun gold into revolutionary discoveries

RHIC recreated the universe's primordial quark–gluon plasma, enabling breakthroughs in antimatter production, proton spin understanding, and glimpses of the Big Bang over a 25-year run.
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fromInfoQ
1 day ago

Conductor Quantum Introduces Coda, a Natural Language Interface for Quantum Computing

Coda provides a natural-language interface that translates user intent into validated quantum circuits and orchestrates execution on real quantum hardware and simulators.
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fromNature
2 days ago

Daily briefing: Tumours use neurons as hotline to the brain

Tumours hijack sensory neurons to suppress local immune responses; snakes lack ghrelin genes; open-source AI OpenScholar improves literature-review accuracy.
Science
fromTechCrunch
12 hours ago

How AI is helping solve the labor issue in treating rare diseases | TechCrunch

AI multiplies scientific productivity, automating drug discovery tasks to tackle workforce shortages and accelerate development of treatments for thousands of neglected and rare diseases.
fromArs Technica
14 hours ago

Rocket Report: SpaceX probes upper stage malfunction; Starship testing resumes

The big news in rocketry this week was that NASA still hasn't solved the problem with hydrogen leaks on the Space Launch System. The problem caused months of delays before the first SLS launch in 2022, and the fuel leaks cropped up again Monday during a fueling test on NASA's second SLS rocket. It is a continuing problem, and NASA's sparse SLS launch rate makes every countdown an experiment, as my colleague Eric Berger wrote this week.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
11 hours ago

UK could lose generation of scientists' with cuts to projects and research facilities

Significant UK physics funding cuts and cancelled projects risk losing a generation of early-career researchers to overseas positions, undermining fundamental science.
fromArs Technica
7 hours ago

To reuse or not reuse-the eternal debate of New Glenn's second stage reignites

The first stage, of course, would be fully reusable. But what about the upper stage of New Glenn, powered by two large BE-3U engines? Around the same time, in the early 2010s, SpaceX was also trading the economics of reusing the second stage of its Falcon 9 rocket. Eventually SpaceX founder Elon Musk abandoned his goal of a fully reusable Falcon 9, choosing instead to recover payload fairings and push down manufacturing costs of the upper stage as much as possible.
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fromwww.bbc.com
1 day ago

Can robots ever be graceful?

Efficient, precise, and intelligent actuators are essential for robots to move gracefully and enable the transition from primitive to sophisticated robots.
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fromSilicon Canals
1 day ago

Psychology says if you need a full day alone to recover after social events, you likely possess these 7 cognitive gifts - Silicon Canals

Needing solitude after social events reflects deeper, resource-intensive cognitive and emotional processing rather than a social deficit.
Science
fromEuro Weekly News
16 hours ago

Catalan scientists join first all-female Mars analogue mission

An all-female scientific team will conduct an Arctic Mars analogue mission on Devon Island in 2027, confronting extreme-environment challenges and involving Catalan research participation.
#cosmology
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
14 hours ago
Science

How can galaxies ever collide in an ever-expanding universe?

Galaxies can collide despite cosmic expansion because expansion dominates only on very large scales, while gravity and local motions can bring galaxies together.
fromNature
3 days ago
Science

Eviction notice

Ancient, slow civilizations composed of dark matter engineered cosmic expansion to politely force luminous life to leave their regions.
fromArs Technica
10 hours ago

New critique debunks claim that trees can sense a solar eclipse

"Granted, "[p]lants have extensive and well established mechanisms of communication, with that of volatiles being the most well studied and understood," he added. "There is also growing recognition that root exudates play a role in plant-plant interactions, though this is only now being deeply investigated. Nothing else, communication through mychorriza, has withstood independent investigation."
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#nasa
fromTechCrunch
1 day ago
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NASA astronauts can now bring their phones with them on their mission to the moon | TechCrunch

fromTechCrunch
1 day ago
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NASA astronauts can now bring their phones with them on their mission to the moon | TechCrunch

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fromBig Think
11 hours ago

The profound life lesson at the heart of chaos theory

Chaotic systems exhibit sensitivity to initial conditions where tiny input differences produce disproportionately large, unpredictable differences in outcomes.
#artemis-ii
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fromTheregister
8 hours ago

DARPA asks labs to outsmart physics with photonic circuits

DARPA is funding efforts to scale photonic integrated circuits to perform larger-scale computing with light using existing photonic components to overcome current physical limitations.
#jeffrey-epstein
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fromenglish.elpais.com
12 hours ago

From the US to Malaga: the world of chemistry chooses Spain

IUPAC relocated its headquarters from the United States to Europe, establishing offices in Rome and Malaga and boosting Spain's role in global chemistry governance.
fromWIRED
1 day ago

Two Titanic Structures Hidden Deep Within the Earth Have Altered the Magnetic Field for Millions of Years

A team of geologists has found for the first time evidence that two ancient, continent-sized, ultrahot structures hidden beneath the Earth have shaped the planet's magnetic field for the past 265 million years. These two masses, known as large low-shear-velocity provinces (LLSVPs), are part of the catalog of the planet's most enormous and enigmatic objects. Current estimates calculate that each one is comparable in size to the African continent, although they remain buried at a depth of 2,900 kilometers.
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fromBig Think
19 hours ago

Ask Ethan: How long can the longest-lived star shine?

Lowest-mass red dwarf stars can live for tens to hundreds of trillions of years, with lifetime primarily determined by mass and composition (metallicity).
Science
fromianVisits
11 hours ago

Photos from NASA's manned space missions go on display in London

Three-day exhibition displays newly digitised Mercury and Gemini photographs, revealing unprecedented clarity of early Earth-from-orbit images; restored prints and Andy Saunders’s book available.
Science
fromMail Online
16 hours ago

Milky Way may NOT have a supermassive black hole at its centre

The Milky Way's central gravity may come from a dense fermionic dark-matter core and surrounding halo rather than a supermassive black hole.
fromdesignboom | architecture & design magazine
16 hours ago

can desert sand with plant-based materials be used to build houses and roads?

Researchers at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology and the University of Tokyo have made a prototype of botanical cement made of desert sand and plant-based additives in hopes that it can be used to build houses and roads. Once mixed, the team adds tiny pieces of wood together and presses them all with heat to produce the cement.
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fromSilicon Canals
10 hours ago

5 unlikely animal friendships that prove connection has no species barrier - Silicon Canals

Animals form deep, unexpected interspecies bonds that transcend instinct, demonstrating that genuine connection can override species boundaries and learned categories.
fromSFGATE
14 hours ago

Study shows turbulence on flights to Hawaii has increased up to 30%

About 45 minutes prior to landing in Honolulu on Dec. 18, 2022, the pilots of Hawaiian Airlines Flight 35, a widebody Airbus A330, saw a white, plume-like cloud swiftly rising vertically ahead of them, caused by a storm cell. Moments later came a hard jolt. Then the airplane dropped rapidly, creating a brief free-falling sensation inside the cabin. Phones, water bottles, blankets and service carts lifted into the air. Passengers were affected as well, with some held down by a seatbelt while others rose upward.
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fromFast Company
9 hours ago

The 'planet parade' starts this weekend. Saturday is your best chance to see it

Six planets will briefly align and be visible together in a 2026 planet parade around an hour after sunset on February 28, looking west.
fromwww.nature.com
1 day ago

Author Correction: Environmentally driven immune imprinting protects against allergy

Author Correction: Environmentally driven immune imprinting protects against allergy Correction to: Nature https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-025-10001-5 Published online 28 January 2026
fromSilicon Canals
9 hours ago

The houseplant that thrives on neglect and actually prefers when you forget to water it - Silicon Canals

I killed seven houseplants before I discovered the secret: I was literally loving them to death. Every morning, I'd check on them with my watering can in hand, convinced that more water meant more love. Turns out, some plants thrive when you basically ignore them. In fact, there's one particular plant that actually prefers when you forget it exists for weeks at a time.
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fromBusiness Insider
15 hours ago

Mark Cuban weighs in on Elon Musk's view that money can't buy happiness

Money reduces financial stress and amplifies existing personality, but beyond modest wealth, additional income yields diminishing returns for happiness.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
14 hours ago

Snakes on a train? King cobras may be riding the rails in India

King cobras are appearing far outside their natural ranges in India, often being transported inadvertently via trains and railway infrastructure.
fromPsychology Today
9 hours ago

Why Your Eyes Like What Your Eyes Like

Real estate with ocean views, stunning mountain vistas, and wide-open green spaces sell at premium prices because humans find those settings pleasing [1-5]. Certain color combinations in fashion-such as brown and forest green-blend harmoniously, while others, such as hot pink and orange, clash. And our eyes like certain proportions in visual objects (like buildings and human faces) but not others.
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fromTheregister
1 day ago

Britain courts private cash to build small modular reactors

UK launches Advanced Nuclear Framework to attract private investment in SMRs to power AI datacenters and provide clean energy, accelerating modular reactor deployment.
Science
fromTechCrunch
1 day ago

Exclusive: Pacific Fusion finds a cheaper way to make its fusion reactor work | TechCrunch

The central economic challenge for fusion is ensuring the cost to initiate a fusion reaction is lower than the revenue from selling the generated electricity.
Science
fromNature
2 days ago

Is UK science in jeopardy? Huge funding reforms spark chaos and anxiety

UK research and innovation capacity is under-exploited and needs reform to convert expertise into companies that generate jobs and economic growth.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Have we solved the mystery of a long-lost Soviet spacecraft, Luna 9?

Luna 9, the first spacecraft to soft-land on the Moon, remains undetected; machine-learning searches have identified candidate sites and Chandrayaan-2 may confirm.
#spacex
fromNature
2 days ago

NASA's latest telescope is a feat of early-career leadership

"we were all in tears"
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fromenglish.elpais.com
1 day ago

The prime numbers of pregnant women: A mathematician exposes the scam of predatory journals

Predatory journals accept fabricated, nonsensical scientific submissions for profit, enabling the rapid growth of thousands of low-quality publications worldwide.
fromwww.bbc.com
1 day ago

UK's 8bn research fund faces 'hard decisions' as it pauses new grants

The boss of UK Research and Innovation (UKRI), the public body which spends 8bn of taxpayer money each year on research and innovation in the UK, has warned the organisation faces "hard decisions" on funding future projects. In an open letter, Ian Chapman said the government had told it to "focus and do fewer things better", which "will result in negative outcomes for some".
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#tidal-disruption-event
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fromwww.bbc.com
1 day ago

London Cancer Hub's 1bn campus plans approved

A £1bn research campus at the London Cancer Hub in Sutton will create 13,000 jobs, add £1.2bn to the economy, and advance cancer research.
Science
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

How Shared Symbols Create Lives Worth Living

Shared cultural meanings form a second inheritance system that accumulates knowledge rapidly and shapes institutions, norms, and human cognition.
fromEngadget
1 day ago

A potential Starlink competitor just got FCC clearance to launch 4,000 satellites

Aspiring Starlink competitor Logos Space Services has secured FCC clearance to launch more than 4,000 broadband satellites into low Earth orbit by 2035, as reported by . Under FCC regulations, the company must deploy half of the approved amount within the next seven years. The company is headed by its founder, Milo Medin, a former project manager at NASA as well as a former vice president of wireless services at Google.
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fromMail Online
1 day ago

US military footage captures multiple UFOs flying over Persian Gulf

A US MQ-9 Reaper drone recorded three coordinated, glowing orbs performing abrupt, physics-defying maneuvers over the Persian Gulf on August 23, 2012.
Science
fromNature
2 days ago

These mysterious ridges could be the secret to younger skin

Rete ridges in skin harbor regenerative stem cells; researchers identified animal skin models and formation clues that could enable skin rejuvenation.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

X-ray dot' discovery fuels JWST black hole star' debate

A newly found red JWST object emits X-rays, supporting the idea that little red dots are black-hole-powered, gas-enshrouded galaxies in the early universe.
fromNature
2 days ago

Not just a chip off the old block: nanoparticles reveal odd traits

A new way of probing nanometre-scale particles of a single chemical element has revealed that they have markedly different properties from larger chunks of the same element.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

NASA's next space suit for Artemis has out-of-this-world mobility

Artemis missions will return humans near and to the moon, requiring advanced lunar space suits balancing protection, life support, and mobility for extended exploration.
#bonobo-cognition
fromNature
2 days ago
Science

This bonobo had a pretend tea party - showing make believe isn't just for humans

fromNature
2 days ago
Science

This bonobo had a pretend tea party - showing make believe isn't just for humans

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fromNews Center
1 day ago

Cells' Systems Cooperate to Form 'Scaffolding' During Egg Development - News Center

Acetylated microtubule networks scaffold actin cable formation to coordinate nurse-cell transfer and build a healthy Drosophila egg.
Science
fromArs Technica
1 day ago

Watch Kanzi the bonobo pretend to have a tea party

Kanzi represented imaginary juice and indicated the cup with pretend juice significantly above chance (34/50, 68 percent).
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Katharine Burr Blodgett's brilliant career began at the House of Magic'

Katharine Burr Blodgett, age 20 in 1918, joined GE's Schenectady research lab and worked under chemist Irving Langmuir amid personal ties to the town.
fromMail Online
1 day ago

Born to dance! Babies have a sense of rhythm from birth, study claims

For the study, a team from the Italian Institute of Technology played J.S. Bach's piano compositions for an audience of 49 sleeping newborns. This included 10 original melodies and four shuffled songs with scrambled melodies and pitches. While the babies listened, the researchers used electroencephalography - electrodes placed on their heads - to measure their brainwaves. When the babies showed signs of surprise, it meant they expected the song to go one way, but it went another.
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Part of our biological toolkit': newborn babies can anticipate rhythm in music, researchers find

Babies in the womb begin to respond to music by about eight or nine months, as shown by changes in their heart rate and body movements, said Dr Roberta Bianco, the first author of the research who is based at the Italian Institute of Technology in Rome. Previous research has also shown that aspects of musical memory can carry over from the womb to birth, she added. However, it was unclear how deeply different aspects of music were processed by such young brains.
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fromArs Technica
1 day ago

Museums incorporate "scent of the afterlife" into Egyptian exhibits

Her team's analysis of the residue samples contained beeswax, plant oils, animal fats, bitumen, and resins from coniferous trees such as pines and larches, as well as vanilla-scented coumarin (found in cinnamon and pea plants) and benzoic acid (common in fragrant resins and gums derived from trees and shrubs). The resulting fragrance combined a "strong pine-like woody scent of the confers," per Huber, mixed in with "a sweeter undertone of the beeswax" and "the strong smoky scent of the bitumen."
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fromBig Think
1 day ago

8 ways that Venus is the Solar System's most extreme planet

Venus is the brightest visible planet and an extreme world characterized by a dense, reflective atmosphere, intense greenhouse heating, and dramatic surface and atmospheric conditions.
Science
fromwww.npr.org
1 day ago

Searching for dinosaur secrets in crocodile bones

Counting growth rings in fossil bones can overestimate dinosaur ages because rings may not form strictly once per year.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

Physicists trace particles back to the quantum vacuum

RHIC experiments traced virtual particle pairs evolving into real, spin-aligned particle pairs, indicating vacuum fluctuations can produce correlated spin descendants.
#quantum-computing
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fromNature
3 days ago

Synthesizing scientific literature with retrieval-augmented language models - Nature

OpenScholar is an open, retrieval-augmented system integrating a 45 million-paper datastore, trained retrievers, and iterative self-feedback to generate cited, up-to-date scientific literature syntheses.
Science
fromSFGATE
2 days ago

Radiation-detecting military aircraft seen flying low over Bay Area

A government AW-139 helicopter will conduct low-altitude aerial radiation surveys over the Bay Area this week as routine Super Bowl security preparedness.
Science
fromMail Online
2 days ago

Chilling theory about what NASA found on the moon 57 years ago

Conspiracy theories claim Apollo 11 astronauts encountered extraterrestrial beings on the Moon during a radio blackout, despite lack of evidence.
fromNature
3 days ago

Large-scale analogue quantum simulation using atom dot arrays - Nature

Analogue quantum simulations are a useful tool for investigating these systems, particularly in regimes in which the applicability of numerical techniques is limited. For different simulator platforms, figures of merit include the electron bandwidth and interaction strength, temperature and the number of simulated lattice sites. Their use is further underscored by the ability to realize distinct lattice geometries, on-site degrees of freedom and by the physical observables that are accessible to experimental measurement.
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fromMail Online
2 days ago

Armageddon was RIGHT! We really could nuke asteroid heading for Earth

Nuclear detonations could deflect a metal-rich asteroid by nudging it, because some asteroid materials strengthen under intense impact rather than shatter.
Science
fromArs Technica
2 days ago

NASA finally acknowledges the elephant in the room with the SLS rocket

The Space Launch System is costly and suffers a slow flight rate despite an eventual successful launch in November 2022.
Science
fromMail Online
3 days ago

Women could soon give birth to babies in SPACE, scientists claim

Human fertility in space presents urgent, poorly understood risks from microgravity and cosmic radiation requiring international research, ethical guidelines, and policy action for long-duration missions.
fromNature
3 days ago

'It means I can sleep at night': how sensors are helping to solve scientists' problems

In fact, Stawicki was on a mission to save the lives of around 1,000 zebrafish ( Danio rerio) in her laboratory. Similarities between lines of hair cells on the fish's flanks and those in the mammalian inner ear enable her to use them as a model to study hearing problems in humans caused by some antibiotics and chemotherapy drugs. A sensor had picked up that the lab's heating system had been knocked out by a power fault.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

On the Future of Species by Adrian Woolfson review are we on the verge of creating synthetic life?

Humans are on the verge of creating synthetic species that will coexist with natural life, offering major benefits while posing significant ecological and ethical risks.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

A 200-foot asteroid has a 4 percent chance of hitting the moon in 2032and we could see it

If a roughly 200-foot asteroid impacts the Moon, the impact will produce a visible optical flash and hours-long infrared afterglow observable from Earth.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

Lung cancer hijacks the brain to trick the immune system

For years, scientists have viewed cancer as a localized glitch in which cells refuse to stop dividing. But a new study suggests that, in certain organs, tumors actively communicate with the brain to trick it into protecting them. Scientists have long known that nerves grow into some tumors and that tumors containing lots of nerves usually lead to a worse prognosis.
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fromMail Online
2 days ago

Satellite image reveals the moment New York's Hudson River froze over

Satellite imagery showed extensive river and reservoir ice in New York, revealing operational impacts, flood and infrastructure risks, and the value of remote sensing for monitoring.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

How supercontinent breakups leave geological orphans behind

These scraps of continental crust are found in the middle of oceans, sometimes hundreds of miles from the nearest continent. Scientists have been mystified for decades by how they came to be there; the fragments were even used as an argument against plate tectonics, says Joao Duarte, a geologist at the University of Lisbon in Portugal. But a recent study in Nature Geoscience suggests that these misplaced fragments fit just fine within our understanding of plate tectonics and actually
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fromwww.nature.com
3 days ago

Author Correction: Cotranslational assembly of protein complexes in eukaryotes revealed by ribosome profiling

Extended Data Fig. 4d duplicated Fig. 2a and strains were partially misannotated; corrected figures are provided and do not change study results or conclusions.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

This baby cluster' of galaxies in the early universe is mystifying astronomers

Protocluster JADES-ID1, containing at least 66 galaxies and hot X-ray–emitting gas, existed scarcely a billion years after the Big Bang.
Science
fromNature
3 days ago

A universal concept for melting in mantle upwellings - Nature

High-pressure multi-anvil experiments simulate volatile-bearing mantle melting at 7 GPa and 1,420–1,630°C using CO2–graphite buffering and Re/Pt capsules.
Science
fromFuturism
2 days ago

Disaster Strikes as Scientists Tunnel Into Core of Doomsday Glacier

Instruments meant to record Thwaites Glacier subglacial waters became trapped in a re-freezing borehole about three-quarters of the way, losing opportunity for continuous data.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

Scientists discover brain network that may cause Parkinson's disease

Parkinson's disrupts the somato-cognitive action network (SCAN), a whole-body brain network linking movement, cognition, arousal, and internal body control.
fromtheconversation.com
2 days ago

Even snowmaking won't save the future of the Winter Olympics

Watching the Winter Olympics is an adrenaline rush as athletes fly down snow-covered ski slopes, luge tracks and over the ice at breakneck speeds and with grace. When the first Olympic Winter Games were held in Chamonix, France, in 1924, all 16 events took place outdoors. The athletes relied on natural snow for ski runs and freezing temperatures for ice rinks.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

Watch as frigid air creates mesmerizing cloud streets' around Florida

Parallel cloud streets form when cold, dry Arctic air flows over warmer ocean waters, creating horizontal convective rolls aligned with the wind.
fromenglish.elpais.com
2 days ago

How beer helped change the history of modern surgery

It might sound like an exaggeration, but it's not: beer played an indirect but crucial role in the birth of modern surgery. Not because it held the key to cures, nor because anyone drank it in an operating room, but because it was one of the first products in which science observed something previously invisible. That something germs would forever change how we understand fermentation, food and also human infections.
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fromSilicon Canals
2 days ago

Science says this one habit can your body almost a decade younger at a cellular level - Silicon Canals

Consistent vigorous exercise can make cells up to nine biological years younger by preserving telomeres and stimulating telomerase, slowing cellular aging.
fromSilicon Canals
2 days ago

7 weather warning signs your grandparents knew that meteorologists now confirm are accurate - Silicon Canals

Growing up outside Manchester, I spent countless summer holidays at my grandparents' farm in the Yorkshire Dales. My grandfather would step outside each morning, scan the sky, and announce with absolute certainty what the weather would do that day. No smartphone apps, no weather channel, just decades of observation. I used to think it was nonsense. How could watching birds or looking at clouds possibly compete with satellite technology? But here's the thing: he was almost always right.
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fromSilicon Canals
3 days ago

9 natural disaster warning signs animals display before humans notice anything wrong - Silicon Canals

Animals often detect imminent natural disasters through subtle environmental cues and flee before humans.
fromNature
3 days ago

PtdIns(3,5)P2 is an endogenous ligand of STING in innate immune signalling - Nature

Exposure to cytosolic DNA triggers innate immune responses through cyclic GMP-AMP (cGAMP) synthase (cGAS)1,2,3. After binding to DNA, cGAS produces cGAMP as a second messenger that binds to stimulator of interferon genes (STING), a signalling adaptor protein anchored to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER)3,4,5. STING then traffics from the ER through the Golgi to perinuclear vesicle clusters, which leads to activation of the kinases TBK1 and IKK and subsequent induction of interferons and other cytokines6,7,8,9.
Science
fromBig Think
2 days ago

Yes, JWST should take the deepest deep-field image ever

Each time we've looked at the Universe in a fundamentally new way, we didn't just see more of what we already knew what was out there. In addition, those novel capabilities allowed the Universe to surprise us, breaking records, revolutionizing our view of what was out there, and teaching us information that we never could have learned without collecting that key data.
Science
fromBusiness Insider
2 days ago

Peter Attia, longevity doctor named in Epstein files, no longer listed as advisor on sleep tech company's website

Attia had been prominently showcased as one of three members of Eight Sleep's scientific advisory board, a post he had held since May 14, 2024. His photo no longer appears as part of the panel on the company homepage. Company officials and Attia did not respond to requests for comment. It's not clear exactly when his name and photo were removed, but the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine shows they were there as recently as January 22.
Science
fromSilicon Canals
2 days ago

People who hate the sound of chewing have this heightened sensitivity that affects everything - Silicon Canals

The scrape of a fork against a plate. The crunch of someone biting into an apple during a meeting. That wet, rhythmic sound of chewing with an open mouth. If reading these descriptions made you physically uncomfortable or even angry, you're not alone. And here's what might surprise you: that visceral reaction to everyday sounds could be a sign of a broader sensory sensitivity that shapes how you experience the entire world around you.
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