Science

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#lick-observatory
fromSFGATE
2 days ago
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Storms threaten historic Bay Area telescope after winds batter observatory

fromsfist.com
2 days ago
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After Lick Observatory Gets Roof Piece Ripped Off by Extreme Winds, Scientists Race to Save 137-Year-Old Telescope

fromSFGATE
2 days ago
Science

Storms threaten historic Bay Area telescope after winds batter observatory

fromsfist.com
2 days ago
Science

After Lick Observatory Gets Roof Piece Ripped Off by Extreme Winds, Scientists Race to Save 137-Year-Old Telescope

Science
fromwww.bbc.com
1 hour ago

AI teachers and cybernetics - what could the world look like in 2050?

By 2050, advances in nanotechnology, AI and robotics will blur machine-biology boundaries, enabling health-monitoring implants and targeted nanomachine drug delivery.
#starlink
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fromIndependent
18 hours ago

Should you book your holiday destination according to your star sign? This woman says you should try it

Astrocartography and natal charts help people choose travel destinations by matching individuals to earthly 'hotspots' where they feel most aligned.
Science
fromwww.npr.org
13 hours ago

Brain organoids are helping researchers, but their use also creates unease

Brain organoids model human neural development, raising ethical questions about consciousness, pain perception, and animal chimeras that call for careful oversight.
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
12 hours ago

Donald Trump wants the US back on the moon before his term ends. Can it happen?

2026 will be pivotal as Artemis missions, Jared Isaacman's NASA leadership, and political directives accelerate a US push to beat China to the Moon.
Science
fromenglish.elpais.com
10 hours ago

Alain Aspect, Nobel laureate in physics: Einstein was so smart that he would have had to recognize quantum entanglement'

Alain Aspect experimentally demonstrated quantum entanglement, settled debates between Einstein and Bohr, catalyzed the second quantum revolution, and won the 2022 Nobel Prize.
fromNews Center
9 hours ago

Shape-Shifting Cell Channel Reveals New Target for Precision Drugs - News Center

In a new study published in Nature Communications, Northwestern University scientists uncovered the molecular trick behind PANX1's versatility. The channel dilates and constricts - just like the iris of an eye - to control the flow of chemical messages, which influence everything from brain activity to inflammation and even fertility. The findings show that PANX1 isn't a rigid channel but a shape-shifting molecular valve that can dynamically resize to accommodate both tiny particles and bulky signaling molecules.
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fromArs Technica
8 hours ago

After half a decade, the Russian space station segment stopped leaking

PrK module atmospheric leaks caused by microscopic cracks have stopped venting after inspections and sealing, with pressure holding steady while NASA and Roscosmos continue monitoring.
fromwww.bbc.com
1 day ago

The great debate about whether the NHS should use magic mushrooms to treat mental health

When I experienced it, I burst out crying,
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#spacex
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fromPsychology Today
7 hours ago

How the Brain Weighs Food in the Blink of an Eye

The brain encodes multiple food attributes around 200 ms after viewing, operating in parallel, with appetizingness and level of processing explaining most judgments.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
10 hours ago

How Woodpeckers Turn Their Entire Bodies into Pecking Machines

Woodpeckers tense their entire bodies and exhale with each explosive strike, coordinating all muscles to peck and withstand forces over thirty times their body weight.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
10 hours ago

Astronomers Have Discovered the Pleiades' Secret Stellar Family

The solar system formed in a large open cluster that later dispersed, while some tightly bound cluster cores can survive and reveal stellar formation histories.
fromBig Think
17 hours ago

Ask Ethan: Why is there no such thing as antigravity?

Although there are four known fundamental forces to the Universe, there's only one that matters on the largest cosmic scales of all: gravitation. The other three fundamental forces: the strong nuclear force, which holds protons and neutrons together, the weak nuclear force, responsible for radioactive decays and any "species change" among quarks and leptons, and the electromagnetic force, which causes neutral atoms to form, are all largely irrelevant on cosmic scales. The reason why is simple: the other forces, when you gather large sets of particles together, all balance out at large distances. Matter, under those three forces, appears "neutral" at large scales, and no net force exists.
Science
fromFast Company
5 hours ago

January 2026 full 'wolf moon': Look up tonight to see the dazzling first supermoon of the year

The January full " wolf moon" is forecast to appear overnight into tomorrow morning Saturday, January 3, peaking at 5:03 a.m. ET when it will be at its fullest, according to EarthSky. However, don't be fooled: It will appear full both nights, due to its close proximity to Earth (making it appear 14% larger), and proximity to Jupiter and Gemini's twin stars-all of which will make it appear even brighter.
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fromArs Technica
3 hours ago

Researchers spot Saturn-sized planet in the "Einstein desert"

Free-floating planets are detectable mainly via microlensing, which measures Einstein ring size; statistical analysis reveals two planet-size clusters separated by an 'Einstein desert' gap.
Science
fromianVisits
12 hours ago

Where to watch the 2026 total solar eclipse

Total solar eclipse on 12 August 2026 will obscure about 90% of the sun in the UK; totality is accessible across northern Spain by train.
#sahelanthropus-tchadensis
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fromForbes
1 day ago

Women Influencers In Energy And Climate To Follow On LinkedIn In 2026

LinkedIn showcases influential women whose substantive, analytical posts provide high-signal insights into energy and climate transitions across science, policy, business, and markets.
Science
fromNature
2 days ago

Science in 2026: what to expect this year

Small-scale AI models may outcompete large language models in reasoning; clinical gene-editing trials for rare disorders, a Phobos sample mission, and US policy changes will shape 2026 science.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

The Push to Make Semiconductors in Space Just Took a Serious Leap Forward

A U.K. startup achieved uncrewed plasma creation aboard a commercial satellite, demonstrating machine-only semiconductor crystal manufacturing in microgravity to reduce space manufacturing costs.
fromEngadget
1 day ago

Airloom will showcase its new approach to wind power at CES

Rather than the very tall towers typically used for this approach, Airloom's structures are 20 to 30 meters high. They are comprised of a loop of adjustable wings that move along a track, a design that's akin to a roller coaster. As the wings move, they generate power just like the blades on a regular wind turbine do. Airloom claims that its structures require 40 percent less mass than a traditional one while delivering the same output.
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fromArs Technica
1 day ago

Research roundup: 7 cool science stories we almost missed

A range of discoveries includes a double-detonating superkilonova, Roman liquid gypsum burials, kangaroo posture enhancing hopping efficiency, and a fossil bird that choked on rocks.
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 day ago

Nathalie Cabrol, astrobiologist: It's an achievement of science to admit we don't know what life is'

Nathalie Cabrol is no ordinary scientist. The astrobiologist holds two records for the highest-altitude scuba dives. She achieved them unintentionally while exploring the lake at Licancabur, a nearly 6,000-meter-high volcano on the border between Chile and Bolivia. Cabrol has spent decades studying Earth to understand the possibility of human life in the extreme conditions of our galaxy. Slight and gray-haired, the explorer wears a vest from the SETI Institute,
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fromScienceDaily
1 day ago

Myth busted: Your body isn't canceling out your workout

Increased physical activity raises total daily energy expenditure; the body does not compensate by reducing energy allocated to other physiological functions.
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

There Goes the Sun: Pondering the Universe's Past and Future

A key goal, writes the author, Bobby Azarian,is to argue against the view that life is an unlikely accident that may have emerged only once on one tiny speck in a vast universe, and that it is certain to disappear as the universe's free energy dissipates in accordance with the second law of thermodynamics. He argues that while such a conclusion had for several generations seemed to be the destination to which clear-headed scientific exploration had brought mankind,
Science
fromTheregister
1 day ago

Mitigating pollution from satellite RF transmissions

In an interview with The Register, Tudor Williams, CTO of high-frequency RF communication company Filtronic, explained the problem, which is mainly related to satellite-to-ground transmissions (many large constellations, such as SpaceX's Starlink, use optical links for satellite-to-satellite communication, which don't cause the same issues.) According to Williams, the problem comes from the side lobes of poorly designed antennas, where signals are unintentionally spread. The effect can be bands used for communications overlapping with observation bands, causing headaches for radio astronomers.
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fromBig Think
1 day ago

10 quantum myths that must die in the new year

Quantum mechanics introduces inherent probabilistic behavior and produces macroscopic phenomena like superconductivity and superfluidity, contradicting classical determinism.
Science
fromTravel + Leisure
1 day ago

January Has 5 Night Sky Wonders-Including a Supermoon, Fireball Meteors, and Jupiter at Its Brightest

January 2026 offers excellent winter stargazing with a wolf supermoon, a diminished Quadrantids meteor shower, bold Jupiter, and very clear northern skies.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Scientists Just Clocked a Rogue' Planet the Size of Saturn

In a new study published in Science on Thursday, scientists show how they measured the mass of one such rogue planet for the first timea breakthrough that could enable further studies of these strange lonely worlds. Instead of looking at the planet's orbit, the research team, led by Subo Dong of Peking University, instead analyzed how the planet's gravity bent the light from a distant star, in a so-called microlensing event, from two separate vantage points: Earth and the now-retired Gaia space observatory.
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fromHigh Country News
1 day ago

An introduction to deep time in the West - High Country News

Earth's deep time renders human history almost instantaneous, with landscapes shaped over billions of years still affecting present-day Western North America.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Watch the First Meteor Shower of 2026 Light Up the Sky This Weekend

The Quadrantid meteor shower peaks the night of January 3–4, producing bright fireballs best seen predawn from the Northern Hemisphere, though moonlight may hinder viewing.
Science
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 day ago

There is as much life left to discover on planet Earth as that which is already known

Discovery and description of new species is accelerating across most taxonomic groups, with as many undiscovered species remaining as are already known.
fromTravel + Leisure
1 day ago

The Surprising Science Behind Why Cold Air Feels So Good-and Where to Breathe the World's Cleanest Air

In late November, the Finnish destination revealed its survey, which found that 73 percent of respondents said they love the feeling of "breathing in crisp winter air," and 74 percent said that " time spent outdoors in winter boosts their mental wellbeing." It also noted that two-thirds (63 percent) said that "winter air smells fresher and cleaner than any other season." And, as Santa's Lapland found, there's actual science to back up that belief.
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fromNature
3 days ago

Random heteropolymers as enzyme mimics - Nature

Random heteropolymers with programmed segmental sidechain projections create pseudo-active sites that catalyse selective reactions and retain activity under non-biological conditions.
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

The man taking over the Large Hadron Collider only to switch it off

On 1 January, Thomson takes over as the director general of Cern, the multi-Nobel prizewinning nuclear physics laboratory on the outskirts of Geneva. It is here, deep beneath the ground, that the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), the largest scientific instrument ever built, recreates conditions that existed microseconds after the big bang. The machine won its place in history for discovering the mysterious Higgs boson, whose accompanying field turns space into a kind of cosmic glue.
Science
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Breakthrough Brain-Computer Interface Is Minimally Invasive

An important milestone has been achieved in brain-computer interface (BCI) technology. A new peer-reviewed study published in Nature Biomedical Engineering shows how a high-performance brain-computer interface can be rapidly implanted through a minimally invasive procedure. "We have demonstrated that the entire surgical procedure for cranial micro-slit insertion, from initial skin incision to endoscope-guided array placement and final securing of the array positions, can be safely performed in under 20 minutes," wrote corresponding author Benjamin Rapoport, MD, PhD, along with his team of neuroscientists at Precision Neuroscience.
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Science
fromFuturism
2 days ago

Man in Intensive Care Unit After Slamming Liquid Nitrogen Cocktail That Ruptured His Stomach

Drinking un-evaporated liquid nitrogen can cause rapid internal gas expansion, rupturing organs and causing life-threatening injuries.
Science
fromFuturism
2 days ago

Astronomers Appear to Have Caught a Star Splitting In Half, With Catastrophic Results

Astronomers observed AT2025ulz, a possible "superkilonova"—a rare double-explosion from a star splitting and re-merging, detected via gravitational waves and electromagnetic signals.
#jwst
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

Cheers! Ring in the New Year with Glittering Champagne Cluster' Image

The Champagne Cluster comprises two interacting galaxy clusters with over 100 galaxies and dominant multimillion-degree gas visible in combined Chandra X-ray and optical data.
fromNature
3 days ago

Highly efficient LED device built by stacking layers of light-emitting perovskite

Stacking light-generating layers in 'tandem' light-emitting diodes (LEDs) can enhance performance, but achieving efficient and stable tandem LEDs made with perovskite materials has remained a challenge.
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fromBig Think
2 days ago

Why scientists can't stop searching for alien life

No confirmed extraterrestrial life has been found despite Solar System exploration, exoplanet discoveries, and radio searches; continued multi-front searches remain scientifically justified.
Science
fromNature
3 days ago

Some of your cells are not genetically yours - what can they tell us about life and death?

Human bodies commonly contain rare cells from other individuals transferred during pregnancy, creating lifelong microchimerism with implications for health, immunity, and concepts of individual identity.
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

They didn't de-extinct anything': can Colossal's genetically engineered animals ever be the real thing?

A genetics startup used DNA editing to claim revival of dire wolves and advances toward resurrecting mammoths, thylacines, dodos and moas through high-profile projects.
Science
fromABC7 Los Angeles
2 days ago

All the eclipses, supermoons, meteor showers and planets to spot in 2026

2026 offers numerous notable celestial events including three supermoons, multiple meteor showers, a blue moon, and a close December supermoon.
Science
fromwww.bbc.com
2 days ago

Seeing in the new year with dinner in a dinosaur

Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins used life-size dinosaur sculptures at Crystal Palace to popularize palaeontology, staging a New Year's Eve dinner inside an Iguanodon.
Science
fromNature
3 days ago

A chiral fermionic valve driven by quantum geometry - Nature

Filtering trivial-state conduction while creating a chirality occupancy imbalance enables mesoscopic coherent transport of chiral fermions for low-power topological electronics without magnetic fields.
#paleontology
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 days ago

Here's What to Get Excited about in Space in 2026

2026 will be a pivotal year for space exploration, featuring a crewed lunar return (Artemis II), multiple lunar missions, and new Mars and Venus expeditions.
Science
fromNature
4 days ago

Science in 2050: the future breakthroughs that will shape our world - and beyond

By 2050 superintelligent AI likely conducts most scientific research, while climate change surpasses 2°C, prompting technological shifts, disease challenges, and profound societal impacts.
Science
fromBig Think
3 days ago

Prove Einstein's relativity for yourself for under $100

Cosmic-ray muons regularly pass through the human body, and charged particles produce visible trails in alcohol vapor via ionization and condensation.
fromwww.mercurynews.com
3 days ago

The year's first meteor shower and supermoon clash in January skies

The Quadrantid meteor shower peaks Friday night into Saturday morning, according to the American Meteor Society. In dark skies during the peak, skygazers typically see around 25 meteors per hour, but this time they'll likely glimpse less than 10 per hour due to light from Saturday's supermoon. The biggest enemy of enjoying a meteor shower is the full moon, said Mike Shanahan, planetarium director at Liberty Science Center in New Jersey.
Science
fromNature
4 days ago

Put pressure on publishers to follow best practice - external regulation is the answer

Hospitals, airlines and drug manufacturers are subject to oversight by external regulators, to ensure that consumers receive safe and high-quality services and products. In science too, regulators check that products from equipment manufacturers and reagent suppliers are fit for purpose. When I oversaw laboratories that used genetically modified organisms, the labs needed external certification to show that they had safe handling and storage processes. There's nothing like knowing that an inspector could show up unannounced to focus people on safety standards.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 days ago

NASA's New Chief Hints Iconic Space Shuttle Might Not Be Moving to Texas After All

NASA may not transfer space shuttle Discovery from the Smithsonian to Houston because transportation safety and cost could exceed available budget despite allocated $85 million.
fromTravel + Leisure
3 days ago

This Is One of the Most Unique Road Trips in the U.S.-With 52 Sites Dedicated to Space, Stargazing, and UFOs

See the night sky through a telescope. There are about a dozen observatories scattered throughout New Mexico, so witnessing the stars, planets, and galaxies through a high-powered telescope is a must. The state's low levels of light pollution and vast open spaces make it perfect for stargazing. Attend a free open house viewing session at The University of New Mexico Campus Observatory in Albuquerque or The Tombaugh Campus Observatory at New Mexico State University in Las Cruces, to use a wide variety of telescopes.
Science
fromNature
4 days ago

Mummies give up their secrets - but not their mystery

Mummies The Museum of Humanity, Paris Until 25 May 2026
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Science
fromParade
3 days ago

Robert Irwin Ranked Birds by 'Rizz' - And the Internet Is Fighting About No. 1

The wedge-tailed eagle ranks highest for loyalty, power, and effortless charisma; other birds receive rankings based on courtship displays, musicality, and ostentatious showmanship.
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fromIndependent
3 days ago

Learning a new language later in life is good for your brain - here's how to do it at any age

Learning a new language in middle age protects brain and body health, can slow biological ageing, and greater multilingualism yields larger benefits.
Science
fromArs Technica
3 days ago

Looking for friends, lobsters may stumble into an ecological trap

Solution holes with resident groupers act as ecological traps by attracting small lobsters with safety cues and thereby increasing their predation risk.
Science
fromTheregister
4 days ago

Four tech trends from 2025 that will shape the future

Structural battery composites and Generation IV fission reactors enable integrated energy storage and safer, more efficient nuclear power for decarbonization and supply-chain resilience.
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fromNature
1 week ago

The Nature Podcast highlights of 2025

Genomic and technological advances enable better potato breeding, vector-targeted malaria control via bed-net plastics, and renewed engagement with quantum-research history.
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fromwww.nature.com
1 week ago

Non-equilibrium snapshots of ligand efficacy at the -opioid receptor

Ligand efficacy at the μ-opioid receptor determines distinct intermediate conformational ensembles and receptor TM5/6 dynamics that modulate Gi activation kinetics.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
4 days ago

Russia Quietly Changed Its Space Station Plans. Here's What That Means

Russia will place its new national orbital station in the ISS's 51.6° orbit, shaping module design, launch infrastructure, and the country's future space economy.
Science
fromEngadget
4 days ago

NASA finally has a leader, but its future is no more certain

Jared Isaacman will lead NASA; his flight experience and entrepreneurship contrast with concerns that his Project Athena plan misunderstands NASA and risks politicized direction.
Science
fromNature
2 weeks ago

Nature's News & Views roundup of 2025

Asteroid Bennu's samples indicate ancient salty subsurface water; cellular identity can diverge from gene expression; extreme rainfall raises unequal mortality; AI created an underwater adhesive.
Science
fromwww.nature.com
1 week ago

NAC controls nascent chain fate through tunnel sensing and chaperone action

NAC binds nascent chains both inside and outside the ribosome exit tunnel, sensing sequence motifs to regulate elongation, folding, and organelle targeting.
fromNature
5 days ago

Probing pollutants: how I use penguin faeces to measure contaminants in Antarctica

In this image, I'm collecting faecal samples from Adélie penguins ( Pygoscelis adeliae) on Horseshoe Island, off the Antarctic Peninsula at about 68° S. As an analytical chemist, my research focuses on detecting trace contaminants such as heavy metals, pesticides and microplastics. It's always been a dream of mine to travel to Antarctica, and I loved every minute. We follow strict rules to protect the wildlife, including wearing a protective suit.
Science
fromenglish.elpais.com
5 days ago

Reinhard Genzel, Nobel laureate in physics: One-minute videos will never give you the truth'

German astrophysicist Reinhard Genzel, 73, takes the stage. He then begins his lecture in the most unexpected way: What's the point of talking about black holes if all the Hollywood producers already know what they are? Going into them is easy, but once you do ooooh. The audience made up of a couple of hundred professors and students from 20 countries is taken aback.
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fromFortune
6 days ago

Blue Origin names Tory Bruno to new national security group | Fortune

Tory Bruno will lead Blue Origin's new national security group to develop technologies and products supporting U.S. national security missions.
fromWIRED
5 days ago

Behold the Manifold, the Concept that Changed How Mathematicians View Space

Standing in the middle of a field, we can easily forget that we live on a round planet. We're so small in comparison to the Earth that from our point of view, it looks flat. The world is full of such shapes-ones that look flat to an ant living on them, even though they might have a more complicated global structure. Mathematicians call these shapes manifolds. Introduced by Bernhard Riemann in the mid-19th century, manifolds transformed how mathematicians think about space.
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fromReason.com
5 days ago

Research suggests people who work from home are having more babies

Working from home at least one day per week is associated with higher fertility and increased preferred number of children, especially when both partners telework.
Science
fromThe Atlantic
6 days ago

55 Facts That Blew Our Minds in 2025

2025 saw discoveries and odd facts across science and culture: gene-edited babies, a new color, photosynthetic sea slugs, AI-driven GDP growth, and surprising historical trivia.
fromKqed
6 days ago

Trump Move to Break Up Atmospheric Research Center Threatens Wildfire, Storm Predictions | KQED

"Undercutting our science community like this is only going to hurt Americans," Balch said.
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fromFuturism
6 days ago

Bonkers New Space Station Expands to Full Size From Single Capsule

Inflatable orbital habitats like Max Space's Thunderbird can deliver ISS-scale internal volume with a single Falcon 9 launch, offering private-sector successors before ISS retirement.
fromLos Angeles Times
6 days ago

'Memory manipulation is inevitable': How rewriting memory in the lab might one day heal humans

When you began to reminisce, brain cells dormant just seconds before began firing chemicals at one another. That action triggered regions of your brain involved in processing emotions, which is why you may have re-experienced some feelings you did at the time of the event. Chemical and electrical signals shot out to the rest of your body. If you were stressed before you began this exercise, your heart rate probably slowed and stabilized as levels of cortisol and other stress hormones decreased in your blood.
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fromInsideHook
6 days ago

Can NASA Find Rare Minerals From Miles Above the Earth?

Airborne hyperspectral sensors like AVIRIS-5 enable high-fidelity detection of mineral deposits and support land, water, and wildfire resource assessments.
fromConde Nast Traveler
6 days ago

7 Astronomical Events Worth Traveling for in 2026

Like the moon's shadow sweeping across the globe during a total solar eclipse, astronomy-focused tourism is taking the world by storm. And in 2026, there are plenty of celestial reasons to travel. You've likely already heard of the August 2026 total solar eclipse, which is undoubtedly the year's marquee event, but you can also travel for everything from rocket launches to meteor showers. These are the astronomy events that can turn trips into once-in-a-lifetime experiences-and where to go to see them at their best.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

It brings you closer to the natural world': the rise of the Merlin birdsong identifying app

Merlin Bird ID uses machine learning to identify birdsong, teaching beginners and expanding global birdwatching participation with millions of downloads and rapid user growth.
fromwww.nature.com
6 days ago

Seven Feel-Good Science Stories to Restore Your Faith in 2025

The biggest science story this year was the political upheaval in the United States. Funding cuts, academic lay-offs and vaccine-sceptic policies have widely been seen as an attack on science, according to critics of President Donald Trump's administration. The resulting damage to science could last way into the future. But, there were also plenty of positive developments in 2025 that offer hope for the coming years.
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fromenglish.elpais.com
6 days ago

Magnets in their heads: How some animals guide themselves using the Earth's magnetic field

Alpine newts and many other animals detect Earth's magnetic field and use it as a compass and positional map to navigate back to natal sites.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 week ago

12 of the Best Interviews Scientific American Did in 2025on AI, Headaches, and More

Topics include Saturn's dozens of newly found moons; CO2's dual role for Earth's habitability and harm; life's dispersal through space travel; aurora observations; journalism support.
Science
fromSan Jose Inside
1 week ago

Trump's Breakup of US Weather Research Center Threatens Wildfire, Storm Forecasts

Dismantling the National Center for Atmospheric Research would threaten critical weather, wildfire, and climate research, endangering public safety and forecasting capabilities.
#exoplanets
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 week ago

What's the Most Distant Galaxy? And Why Does It Matter?

As a science communicator, I don't think a week goes by without a press release hitting my inbox informing me of astronomers finding some new record-breaking object. Sometimes it's the smallest planet yet discovered or the most iron-deficient star. But a very common claim is a distance record: the farthest galaxy from Earth ever seen, for example. When it comes to these sorts of record breakers, I have complicated feelings, built over decades of writing about them.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Defunding fungi: US's living library of vital ecosystem engineers' is in danger of closing

The International Collection of Vesicular Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Fungi (INVAM), a unique global repository of AM fungi, faces imminent closure due to federal funding cuts.
Science
fromWIRED
1 week ago

Could You Use a Rowboat to Walk on the Seafloor Like Jack Sparrow?

An upside-down dinghy can trap breathable air underwater only briefly and under limited conditions because buoyancy, pressure, and air dilution make sustained breathing impractical.
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