Science

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#longevity
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fromNature
2 days ago

Daily briefing: Brain-immune crosstalk worsens the damage of heart attacks

Vagus nerve signalling during heart attacks triggers immune-driven inflammation that worsens cardiac damage; blocking those signals improves outcomes in mice and offers therapeutic potential.
Science
fromTNW | Sustainability
4 days ago

Rainbow Weather raises $5.5M to refine real-time weather forecasting

Rainbow Weather raised $5.5M seed to build hyperlocal, minute-by-minute precipitation forecasts using machine learning that fuses radar, satellite, stations, and phone barometers.
Science
fromNature
1 day ago

China is betting on 'optical' computer chips - will they power AI?

Photonic chips that use light could address electronic-chip energy and speed limits, with China leading rapid research growth in the field.
Science
fromThe Cipher Brief
7 hours ago

America's Intelligence Satellites are Proliferating: Their Protection is Not, With Exceptions

Many sensitive U.S. national-security satellites remain dangerously exposed to hostile action despite rapid launch cadence and plans for proliferated constellations.
fromEngadget
4 hours ago

NASA used Claude to plot a route for its Perseverance rover on Mars

Since 2021, NASA's Perseverance rover has achieved a number of historic milestones, including sending back the first audio recordings from Mars. Now, nearly five years after landing on the Red Planet, it just achieved another feat. This past December, Perseverance successfully completed a route through a section of the Jezero crater plotted by Anthropic's Claude chatbot, marking the first time NASA has used a large language model to pilot the car-sized robot.
Science
fromFuturism
2 hours ago

The United States Is Suffering Stomach-Churning Brain Drain

Brain drain refers to circumstances in which highly trained experts from underdeveloped and overexploited countries migrate to wealthier international job markets. Such loss of human capital can be catastrophic for a nation's development, as a shortage of trained workers tends to strain critical sectors like healthcare and education. Now the United States government - which once fielded as many as 281,000 scientists and engineers - is experiencing a similar phenomenon.
Science
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fromNature
1 day ago

Largest galaxy survey yet confirms that the Universe is not clumpy enough

The Dark Energy Survey's six-year map shows matter is less clumpy than standard cosmological theory predicts, revealing unresolved tensions in cosmology.
#blue-origin
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
11 hours ago

Lost ancient Greek star catalog decoded by particle accelerator

Researchers decoded portions of Hipparchus's lost star catalog from a palimpsest using synchrotron imaging, revealing constellation names and measurements.
#artemis-ii
Science
fromMail Online
9 hours ago

Out-of-control Chinese rocket smashes into the South Pacific Ocean

A Chinese Zhuque-3 rocket re-entered and crashed into the southern Pacific Ocean about 1,200 miles southeast of New Zealand after decaying from orbit.
Science
fromMail Online
4 hours ago

Earthquakes rattle California city after weeks of silence

Seismic activity returned to San Ramon with two small tremors; no imminent major earthquake is indicated, but long-term Bay Area risk remains high.
#katharine-burr-blodgett
#hubble-space-telescope
fromwww.nature.com
1 day ago

Publisher Correction: Nanotyrannus and Tyrannosaurus coexisted at the close of the Cretaceous

Since the version of the article initially published, the copyright line has been amended to North Carolina Department of Natural and Cultural Resources and James Napoli, under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited in the HTML and PDF versions of the article.
#greenland
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
7 hours ago

Winter's next wallop includes a bomb cyclone and Florida freezing

Intensely cold air is scouring the central and eastern U.S. again and will send temperatures plummeting all the way to the tip of Florida. Along with this new Arctic incursion, a major bomb cyclone storm is strengthening off the coast of the Carolinas, potentially bringing rare blizzard conditions to the region. Some areas haven't seen this amount of accumulating snow in over 30 years, wrote the National Weather Service's office in Wilmington, N.C., on Facebook.
Science
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fromMail Online
8 hours ago

America's 'white gold' rush hits Arkansas with $2.3 trillion discovery

Direct Lithium Extraction can unlock 19 million tons of Arkansas lithium, potentially ending US dependence on China and creating a large domestic lithium supply.
Science
fromNews Center
4 days ago

New Underlying Mechanisms May Support Proper Transcriptional Regulation and Improve Targeted Therapies - News Center

BET proteins, particularly BRD4, regulate transcription initiation and elongation independently of bromodomains, with implications for targeted therapeutic development.
Science
fromwww.nature.com
1 day ago

Publisher Correction: A domed pachycephalosaur from the early Cretaceous of Mongolia

Copyright line amended to North Carolina Department of Natural and Cultural Resources with exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited in the HTML and PDF versions.
Science
fromHigh Country News
15 hours ago

See the West's rich geologic past - High Country News

The Western United States' landscapes reflect deep geologic history spanning billions to millions of years, shaping present-day landforms, ecosystems, and resources.
fromState of the Planet
4 days ago

Sea Levels Are Rising-But in Greenland, They Will Fall

That seemingly paradoxical dynamic results from several factors. Foremost among them is the rebound of land beneath the Greenland Ice Sheet, a mile-thick body of glacial ice that covers 80 percent of the island and is being lost to melting at a rate of roughly 200 billion tons each year. As the ice sheet loses mass, the land beneath rises.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
7 hours ago

For predatory dinosaurs, the Late Jurassic was an all-you-can-eat sauropod buffet

Sauropodshumongous reptiles with a long neck and tail and thick, elephantlike legsplayed a starring role in the dinosaur ecosystem, according to a new study. These massive dinosaurs are the largest creatures to ever walk on land. But they also played a crucial part in the food chain, the study authors write, acting as ecosystem engineers. The research was published on Friday in the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin.
Science
fromWIRED
5 days ago

No One Is Quite Sure Why Ice Is Slippery

The reason we can gracefully glide on an ice-skating rink or clumsily slip on an icy sidewalk is that the surface of ice is coated by a thin watery layer. Scientists generally agree that this lubricating, liquidlike layer is what makes ice slippery. They disagree, though, about why the layer forms. Three main theories about the phenomenon have been debated over the past two centuries. Last year, researchers in Germany put forward a fourth hypothesis that they say solves the puzzle.
Science
#genetics
fromPsychology Today
9 hours ago

Why Do Dogs Need a Tail?

Careful kinematic research, such as that done by a Japanese team headed by Naomi Wada, has determined that the dog's tail was designed to assist the dog with balance. When a dog is running and turns quickly, he throws the front part of his body in the direction he wants to go. This causes his back to bend; however, the forward velocity is such that his hindquarters will tend to continue in the original direction.
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Science
fromCornell Chronicle
2 days ago

Three early-career professors win NSF development awards | Cornell Chronicle

NSF CAREER awards fund Cornell early-career faculty to study microplastics’ environmental transport and toxic interactions and to develop human-like robot learning, with required education components.
Science
fromZDNET
1 day ago

Why the next-gen solid-state battery everyone talks about isn't in your iPhone yet

Solid-state batteries offer higher energy density, greater safety, faster charging, and longer lifespans, but widespread adoption is limited by cost and manufacturing scale.
Science
fromNature
2 days ago

ArXiv says submissions must be in English: are AI translators up for the job?

arXiv requires all submissions to be in English or include a full English translation starting 11 February.
fromSecuritymagazine
2 days ago

The New Battleground of Cybersecurity

I've always had what I would consider a hacker mindset, a curiosity to take things apart, understand them, and use that knowledge to solve problems. That mindset took me on a circuitous route into the cybersecurity industry; after being kicked out of high school for hacking computer systems, I worked a range of jobs, managing office supply companies by day and cracking Wi-Fi networks by night until I started a Digital Forensics degree which led me to the world of security research.
Science
Science
fromFlowingData
3 days ago

Cuts to science and research in the U.S. over the past year

Administration cuts to science funding, grant withholding, and elimination of research jobs caused a sharp decline in government science agency staffing.
Science
fromEmptywheel
1 day ago

Space Cowboys

Billionaire suborbital flights spark controversy over priorities but contribute to engineering advancement and US space capability while raising valid ethical and practical questions.
Science
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

How the Cerebellum Helps Words Flow From Your Brain

A right posterior cerebellar region partners with left-hemisphere language centers to support fluency, sharing neural mechanisms with physical coordination across hemispheres.
fromFuturism
1 day ago

NASA's Moon Spacesuits Are Plagued With Issues

Particularly when it comes to stepping out of the spacecraft - the agency has yet to pick between Blue Origin and SpaceX's offerings in that regard - staying protected from the extreme temperature swings, space radiation, and lack of atmosphere is extremely challenging. That's not to mention the physical limitations of an extremely bulky spacesuit, which could physically tax astronauts even more than stepping outside of the International Space Station during a spacewalk.
Science
fromArs Technica
1 day ago

Do you have ideas about how to improve America's space program?

Entrants will be required to write three- to five-page white papers that explain their idea and how they would shape markets and strengthen the space economy or national security. Papers are due by June 30, and judging will be complete by August 15. As an additional incentive, the best ideas will be briefed to relevant policymakers, including key members of Congress, NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman, and Saltzman, of the Space Force.
Science
#exoplanet
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fromNature
2 days ago

Critical social media posts linked to retractions of scientific papers

Critical posts on X can serve as early warnings of problematic scientific articles and higher retraction risk when negative sentiment or red-flag words appear.
Science
fromArs Technica
1 day ago

What ice fishing can teach us about making foraging decisions

Ice-fishing competitions reveal how social cues and group behavior influence human foraging decisions using GPS and head-mounted camera tracking in real-world conditions.
Science
fromBig Think
1 day ago

Memorizing London's 25,000 streets changes cabbies' brains - and may prevent Alzheimer's

Mastering The Knowledge to become a London taxi driver demands intense spatial learning that physically restructures and grows the brain.
#james-webb-space-telescope
fromEngadget
2 days ago
Science

Astronomers share new insights about the early universe via the Webb Space Telescope

fromEngadget
2 days ago
Science

Astronomers share new insights about the early universe via the Webb Space Telescope

Science
fromNature
2 days ago

Developmental convergence and divergence in human stem cell models of autism - Nature

Distinct rare mutations and common genetic variation jointly shape ASD risk, yet convergent molecular pathology and early fetal neurodevelopmental mechanisms can be studied using stem-cell models.
frominsideevs.com
1 day ago

Here's How Much Range EVs Really Lose After 150,000 Miles

Battery degradation on high-mileage EVs is not as big a deal as some might make you believe. Real-world data shows that EVs with over 150,000 miles are still going strong, with minimal degradation. Older EVs are more affected by high mileage, but technology has made newer models more resilient. Battery degradation is inevitable, but new research shows that EV owners should just keep driving their cars without worrying about what happens with the thousands of cells that live in their cars' floors.
Science
fromBig Think
1 day ago

The systems that build star performers

If you were asked to build a future bestselling author, how would you go about it? Chances are, you'd start young, scouting for early signs of promise. You'd probably reinforce that raw talent right away, sending your protégé to writing workshops and private tutors. You might line their shelves with Pulitzer winners, assign the classics, fast-track an English degree - tracing a path right up to the gates of publishing.
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Science
fromwww.nature.com
2 days ago

Author Correction: Hunter-gatherer sea voyages extended to remotest Mediterranean islands

Corrections to regional radiocarbon uncertainties do not meaningfully change conclusions about timing of the Mesolithic–Neolithic transition or maritime voyages in the central Mediterranean.
Science
fromBig Think
1 day ago

Dark matter's "nightmare scenario" looks more likely than ever

Dark matter likely exists as unseen mass whose only detectable effect may be gravity, potentially making non-gravitational direct detection impossible.
Science
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

No Longer, Voice: A Closer Look at Food Noise

Food noise is an uncontrollable, obsessive mental preoccupation with eating that can arise from deprivation and impair mood, cognition, and social functioning.
fromMail Online
2 days ago

What could go wrong? Experts DRILL into Antarctica's Doomsday Glacier

Measuring around the same size as Great Britain, this huge mass of ice in West Antarctica is one of the largest and fastest changing glaciers in the world. Worryingly, research has shown that if it collapses, the glacier will cause global sea levels to rise by a whopping 2.1ft (65cm) - plunging entire communities underwater. For this reason, it has been nicknamed the 'Doomsday Glacier'.
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Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

How new CT scanners ended Heathrow 100ml liquids rule

Advanced CT scanners at Heathrow allow keeping electronics in bags and carrying liquids up to two liters, replacing the longstanding 100-ml carry-on limit.
fromKqed
1 week ago

Former Oakland Raider Kevin Johnson Is Killed at LA Encampment | KQED

The condition is the result of repeated traumatic brain injuries, which can happen repeatedly over the course of a football season. According to Dr. Daniel Daneshvar, a Harvard University professor and co-director of sports concussion at Mass General Brigham in Boston, CTE easily flies under the radar because it can only be diagnosed via brain analysis after a person's death.
Science
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fromNature
4 days ago

Daily briefing: The battle over the identity of the first animals

Scientists debate whether sponges or jellies were the earliest animal lineage.
Science
fromNature
3 days ago

The unfortunate embossing of Subsector XZ-74

A junior mapgrapher discovers a cluster of stars in Subsector XZ-74 is inexplicably dimming and reports it to a dismissive, powerful superior.
#challenger-disaster
fromZDNET
2 days ago
Science

I watched the Challenger shuttle disaster from inside Mission Control - 40 years ago today

fromTheregister
2 days ago
Science

Challenger at 40: The disaster that changed NASA

Cold-weather-induced O-ring failure allowed hot gases to breach the External Tank, sever structural links, and cause the Space Shuttle Challenger to break apart, killing seven crew.
fromArs Technica
2 days ago
Science

I bought "Remove Before Flight" tags on eBay in 2010-it turns out they're from Challenger

Remove Before Flight tags detached before Challenger's launch are being traced to document provenance for preservation and display in museums and archives.
fromZDNET
2 days ago
Science

I watched the Challenger shuttle disaster from inside Mission Control - 40 years ago today

fromwww.bbc.com
2 days ago

AI model from Google's DeepMind reads recipe for life in DNA

Called AlphaGenome, the model could help scientists discover why subtle differences in our DNA put us at risk of conditions such as high blood pressure, dementia and obesity. It could also dramatically accelerate our understanding of genetic diseases and cancer. The developers of the model acknowledge it's not perfect, but experts have described it as "an incredible feat" and "a major milestone".
Science
Science
fromNature
3 days ago

Deep-sea robots will search for source of mysterious 'dark oxygen'

Oxygen has been detected 4,000 metres deep in the Pacific, prompting funded investigations with specialized landers and lab experiments to determine its source.
Science
fromThe Verge
2 days ago

Scientists let AI loose on Hubble's archives

AI scanned Hubble's archives to find hundreds of astrophysical anomalies, revealing nearly 1,400 unusual objects including many previously undocumented.
fromArs Technica
2 days ago

Japan lost a 5-ton navigation satellite when it fell off a rocket during launch

The eighth H3 rocket lifted off from Tanegashima Island in southern Japan on December 22, local time, carrying a roughly five-ton navigation satellite into space. The rocket was supposed to place the Michibiki 5 satellite into an orbit ranging more than 20,000 miles above the Earth. Everything was going well until the H3 jettisoned its payload fairing, the two-piece clamshell covering the satellite during launch, nearly four minutes into the flight.
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fromNature
3 days ago

Prethermalization by random multipolar driving on a 78-qubit processor - Nature

High-frequency periodic driving and strong disorder can suppress heating in many-body systems, while random temporal drives typically open rapid energy absorption channels.
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

Google DeepMind launches AI tool to help identify genetic drivers of disease

AlphaGenome predicts how mutations alter gene regulation to identify disease-driving variants, map tissue-specific functional elements, and guide gene-therapy design.
#doomsday-clock
fromWIRED
2 days ago
Science

The Doomsday Clock Is Now 85 Seconds to Midnight. Here's What That Means

fromWIRED
2 days ago
Science

The Doomsday Clock Is Now 85 Seconds to Midnight. Here's What That Means

fromNature
3 days ago

Constraints on axion dark matter by distributed intercity quantum sensors - Nature

Y.W. designed the experimental protocols, performed experiments, analysed the data and wrote the manuscript. Y.H., X.K., D.C., J.X.X. and W.Z. performed experiments and edited the manuscript. Y.C. and S.P. edited the manuscript. M.J., X.P. and J.D. proposed the experimental concept, designed experimental protocols and proofread and edited the manuscript. All authors contributed with discussions and checking the manuscript. Corresponding authors Correspondence to Min Jiang or Xinhua Peng.
Science
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

Google DeepMind unleashes new AI to investigate DNA's dark matter'

AlphaGenome predicts functional effects of mutations in long noncoding DNA sequences up to one million base pairs, helping interpret genomic variants for disease research.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

The Schrodinger equation is getting a glow-up for its 100th birthday

Including observers within the Schrodinger equation reveals new perspectives and may redefine boundaries of quantum mechanics, addressing enduring mysteries about measurement and reality.
Science
fromOpen Culture
3 days ago

RIP Gladys Mae West, the Pioneering Black Mathematician Who Helped Lay the Foundation for GPS

Gladys Mae West developed precise geodetic and computational models of Earth's shape that enabled modern GPS technology through pioneering computer programming and mathematical work.
Science
fromThe New Yorker
2 days ago

The Forecast Wars on Weather Twitter

Social-media weather influencers sensationalize forecasts into certainty, contrasting cautious probabilistic professional meteorology and amplifying hype despite using the same public model data.
fromwww.dw.com
2 days ago

Arctic scientists 'feel pretty uncomfortable' on Greenland

Decades of successful scientific collaboration could be at risk if Europe-US political relations continue to fray over trade and defense issues. For more than 30 years, Arctic nations have worked together across the physical, biological and social sciences to understand one of the world's fastest changing regions. Since the late 1970s, the Arctic has lost around 33,000 square miles of sea ice each year roughly the same area as Czechia.
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fromNature
3 days ago

Optical control of integer and fractional Chern insulators - Nature

Circularly polarized optical pumping prepares and switches ferromagnetic polarization in twisted MoTe2 bilayers, enabling control of Chern insulator (CI) and fractional Chern insulator (FCI) states.
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

The Link Between Thinking and Being

Metaphors are linked to how we experience the world around us, according to seminal work by researchers George Lakoff and Mark Johnson. In English, we "move forward" with our lives and don't "retreat into" the past. We speak about people who are "cold as ice" and "heavy" matters we need to resolve. Some of these metaphorical expressions are more than just, well, expressions-they are actually based on our sensory experiences. This mind-body link is called "embodied cognition."
Science
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fromArs Technica
6 days ago

Did Edison accidentally make graphene in 1879?

Thomas Edison may have unintentionally produced graphene during his incandescent-bulb filament experiments, predating modern laboratory synthesis.
fromBig Think
2 days ago

JWST finds nine category-defying objects. Have astronomers found their "platypus?"

In the animal kingdom, one of the most bizarre discoveries of all-time was the platypus. When reports of the platypus reached the western hemisphere, most leading naturalists at the time assumed it was a hoax, including the first European scientists to examine a specimen in 1799. It was an animal that laid eggs, yet it was a mammal. It had the bill of a duck, but the tail of a beaver.
Science
fromMail Online
3 days ago

Air fryers release 100x fewer pollution particles than deep-fat fryers

Our study shows that repeated use of air fryers without being able to clean the more inaccessible cooking surfaces can negate some of the benefits for indoor air quality,
Science
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

JWST spots most distant galaxy ever, pushing the limits of the observable universe

MoM‑z14 is the most distant galaxy detected, seen 280 million years after the Big Bang, and is unexpectedly bright, dense, and chemically enriched.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

Why the weekend's winter storm was even worse in a warming climate

A warmer atmosphere holds more moisture, so recent global warming increased this winter storm's precipitation by up to 20 percent, producing heavier snow and ice.
fromSilicon Canals
2 days ago

Women have a brain aging advantage men don't-the silent X chromosome - Silicon Canals

For decades, scientists have observed a consistent pattern: women typically live about five years longer than men and exhibit slower cognitive decline as they age. Now, groundbreaking research from the University of California, San Francisco has uncovered a surprising biological mechanism that may explain this disparity. The discovery centers on what researchers once dismissed as a dormant structure, the so-called "silent" X chromosome that exists in every female cell.
Science
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fromNature
3 days ago

Cholinergic modulation of dopamine release drives effortful behaviour - Nature

Dopamine release in the nucleus accumbens scales with prior effort for identical rewards, likely via local modulation of DA axon terminals involving acetylcholine.
Science
fromNature
3 days ago

Intestinal macrophages modulate synucleinopathy along the gut-brain axis - Nature

Muscularis externa macrophages (ME-Macs) are necessary for the formation and distribution of α-synuclein pathology.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

Can eating garlic make you smell sexier? The surprising connection between diet and body odor

Diet can influence natural body odor via volatile compounds excreted in breath or sweat, but evidence is limited and effects are not straightforward.
fromABC7 Los Angeles
2 days ago

'Emotional' Coco Gauff smashes racket in frustration after Australian Open loss

Certain moments - the same thing happened to Aryna (Sabalenka) after I played her in the final of the U.S. Open - I feel like they don't need to broadcast,
Science
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fromNature
5 days ago

Daily briefing: Blister beetles hoodwink bees with floral smells

Beetle larvae imitate floral scent to parasitize bee nests; Greenland is a global research hotspot; atmospheric microplastic concentrations may be much lower than reported.
Science
fromEngadget
3 days ago

Astronomers discover over 800 cosmic anomalies using a new AI tool

AnomalyMatch scanned nearly 100 million Hubble image cutouts in 2.5 days and identified 1,400 anomalous objects, over 800 previously undocumented.
fromArs Technica
3 days ago

As data from space spikes, an innovative ground station company seeks to cash in

By the end of the year, Northwood, based in El Segundo, California, had shown the ability to build eight of these Portal arrays a month. And in January the company had deployed operational Portal antennas across two continents. These deployments, which comprise an area of 8 to 15 meters, have the equivalent capability of a 7-meter parabolic dish, said Griffin Cleverly, co-founder and chief technical officer of Northwood.
Science
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fromTheregister
3 days ago

NASA confirms TESS temporarily felled by command error

TESS entered safe mode after a ground command left its solar arrays angled away from the Sun, causing battery discharge and temporary recovery.
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