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fromFuncheap
4 hours ago

"Science@Cal": Renowned Scientist Lecture | UC Berkeley

Free public science lectures by UC Berkeley scientists occur monthly on the third Saturday at 11 am in 159 Mulford Hall; seating is first-come.
Science
fromFuncheap
4 hours ago

"Science@Cal": Renowned Scientist Lecture | UC Berkeley

Science@Cal offers free monthly public science lectures at UC Berkeley on the third Saturday at 11 am in 159 Mulford Hall; seating is first-come, first-served.
fromHarvard Gazette
2 hours ago

When your research donor is 6When your research donor is 6 - Harvard Gazette

In a classroom in the Sherman Fairchild Laboratory Building, 6-year-old Marianne Cullen was starting to get the jitters. She was about to meet her favorite scientist, regenerative biologist and axolotl researcher Jessica Whited. "You might have to hold me up, in case I faint," the Springfield first-grader told her parents, Kat Demetrion and Robert Cullen, as she clutched her pink axolotl stuffie tightly in her lap.
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fromHarvard Gazette
2 hours ago

'It feels very personal' - Harvard Gazette

"Emotionally, it stings," said Whited, associate professor in the Department of Stem Cell and Regenerative Biology, fighting back tears. "It feels very personal. It took me 19 years to build this axolotl colony and research program with a goal to ultimately help human lives. It couldn't have come at a worse time."
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fromNature
20 hours ago

The Moon is rusting - thanks to 'wind' blown all the way from Earth

Scientists have found that oxygen particles blown from Earth to the Moon can turn lunar minerals into hematite, also known as rust. The discovery adds to researchers' growing understanding of the deep interconnection between Earth and the Moon - and shows how the Moon keeps a geological record of those interactions, says Ziliang Jin, a planetary scientist at Macau University of Science and Technology in China. He and his colleagues reported their findings earlier this month in Geophysical Research Letters.
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fromPsychology Today
1 hour ago

You Are Not the Opinions of Others

Academic research that includes most dictionaries defines self-belief as having a positive attitude, personal confidence and a willingness to engage. Self-efficacy involves an individual having the belief and self-confidence in their ability to succeed at tasks. Self-esteem is about having a favorable self-impression and self-respect. In relation to opinion, an opinion is a personal point of view that is not necessarily based on fact or knowledge.
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fromPsychology Today
46 minutes ago

How Living in a Digital World Changes Kids' Brains

Limited real-world experience and excessive digital consumption during childhood impair frontal-lobe connectivity and executive-function development, producing symptoms like those in neurodivergent brains.
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fromFuturism
2 hours ago

Scientists Say We Should Blow Up This Dangerous Asteroid Before It Gets Here

Scientists propose destroying asteroid 2024 YR4 with nuclear kinetic disruption to prevent potential lunar impact and hazardous debris during December 2032.
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fromABC7 Los Angeles
39 minutes ago

NASA introduces its newest astronauts: 10 chosen from more than 8,000 applicants

NASA selected ten new astronauts—six women and four men—to train for lunar missions and potential Mars exploration.
Science
fromNature
20 hours ago

Trump links autism and Tylenol: is there any truth to it?

Current evidence does not definitively link prenatal acetaminophen use to autism; observed associations are small and research remains inconclusive.
fromOpen Culture
20 hours ago

Explore the Fascinating Map of Fungi: An Introduction to the Vast Mushroom Kingdom

Yes, this big map depicts the realm of the humble mushroom, which "shares the forest with the plants and the animals, but it's not a plant, and it's not an animal." And the mushroom itself, like we're used to seeing sprouting beneath our feet, is only a small part of the organism: the rest "lives hidden, out of sight, below ground. Beneath every mushroom is a fungal network of hair-like strands called the mycelium," which begins as a spore.
Science
fromwww.nature.com
20 hours ago

Author Correction: Mechanism of BRCA1BARD1 function in DNA end resection and DNA protection

Author Correction: Mechanism of BRCA1BARD1 function in DNA end resection and DNA protection Author Correction Open access Published: 22 September 2025 Ilaria Ceppi orcid.org/0000-0001-6496-89831 na1, Maria Rosaria Dello Stritto orcid.org/0000-0002-3899-80511 na1, Martin Mutze2, Stefan Braunshier1, Valentina Mengoli1, Giordano Reginato orcid.org/0009-0002-5284-43391, Ho My Phuc Vo orcid.org/0000-0002-7725-01343,4, Sonia Jimeno5,6, Ananya Acharya1, Megha Roy1, Aurore Sanchez1 nAff8, Swagata Halder1 nAff9, Sean Michael Howard orcid.org/0000-0001-7556-19511 nAff10, Raphael Guerois orcid.org/0000-0001-5294-28587, Pablo Huertas orcid.org/0000-0002-1756-44495,6, Sylvie M. Noordermeer orcid.org/0000-0003-2737-96903,4, Ralf Seidel orcid.org/0000-0002-6642-053X2 & Petr Cejka orcid.org/0000-0002-9087-032X1 Nature (2025)Cite this article Breast cancer DNA Double-strand DNA breaks Enzyme mechanisms Correction to: Nature https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-07909-9 Published online 11 September 2024
fromTime Out London
8 hours ago

What's the Science Museum's brand new Space gallery like? I went to find out

I was a bit uncertain as to what to exactly expect. Surely the spectacular actual spaceships that were on display before would not be binned? They have not! With a few relatively small tweaks, features the same items as Exploring Space did when it closed. But it's also worth pointing out that Exploring Space changed considerably over its lifespan, with items like Tim Peake's space capsule and a spacesuit belonging to the first Brit in space, Helen Sharman, being added way after its 1986 opening.
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fromNature
20 hours ago

Corpse flowers waft out stinky compounds as fast as landfills do

Corpse flowers emit their strongest odor on the first night of blooming to attract carrion-loving pollinators.
Science
fromNature
20 hours ago

I deeply scan timber to reduce wasting this precious resource

CT scanning reveals internal wood structure and mechanical properties to identify high-quality regions and maximize timber value from each tree.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
5 hours ago

The Almost Impossible' Chemistry of Two Deep-Earth Diamonds Shows How These Gems Form

A pair of diamonds that formed hundreds of kilometers deep in Earth's malleable mantle both contain specks of materials that form in completely opposing chemical environmentsa combination so unusual that researchers thought their coexistence was almost impossible. The substances' presence provides a window into the chemical goings-on of the mantle and the reactions that form diamonds. The two diamond samples were found in a South African mine. As with plenty of other precious gemstones, they contain what are called inclusionstiny bits of surrounding rocks captured as the diamonds form.
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fromianVisits
9 hours ago

From space suits to space shits: The Science Museum's new space gallery has opened

The Science Museum's new space gallery emphasizes modern space technologies, hands-on inspiration for youth, and displays reconfigured historic capsules alongside new satellite and re-entry prototypes.
Science
fromSustainable Bus
10 hours ago

NMC, LFP, LTO. What's the Difference? [The Battery Cycle #2]

Li-ion batteries work by lithium ions moving between anode and cathode through electrolyte and separator, with chemistries trading energy density, safety, and longevity.
Science
fromNature
20 hours ago

Real-time molecular recorders expose the inner lives of cells

DNA-based molecular recorders enable cells to log signals, lineage, and gene activity in genomic DNA, providing temporal, spatial histories previously inaccessible.
Science
from24/7 Wall St.
6 hours ago

Every Space Station Ever Built, and the One Scheduled for Fiery Reentry

Two crewed space stations currently operate in orbit; the International Space Station is scheduled for a controlled reentry in 2031.
fromFuturism
10 hours ago

Scientists Printed Viruses Designed by AI and They're Successfully Reproducing

Think of them like pesky little genomic robots that hijack our biology to replicate, since they don't generate their own energy and can't reproduce on their own. They aren't made of cells, and are driven by a ruthless set of programmed instructions to multiply at all costs. Since their genomes are pretty simple, they're easier to tinker with and less ambitious for a human or machine to recreate. Remember: a genome is the DNA in an organism, not just a few strands.
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fromThe Nation
11 hours ago

The Fight Over the Meaning of Fossils

Early 19th-century fossil discoveries like plesiosaurs confirmed extinct marine reptiles and an ancient Earth, challenging traditional biblical chronologies and transforming scientific thought.
Science
fromTechCrunch
4 hours ago

Blue Origin wins NASA deal to ferry VIPER rover to lunar south pole | TechCrunch

Blue Origin will deliver NASA's VIPER lunar rover on its Blue Moon Mk1 lander, reviving the canceled mission for launch targeting late 2027.
fromTheregister
9 hours ago

Brit scientists over the Moon after tea grown in lunar soil

"As part of a study into how the astronauts of tomorrow could sustain themselves for long periods of living and working on the Moon, researchers from the University of Kent have demonstrated how it's possible to grow tea in lunar soil. Led by Professor Nigel Mason of Kent's School of Physics and Astronomy and Dr Sara Lopez-Gomollon of the university's School of Biosciences,"
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#spacex
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
8 hours ago

The Meteorite That Vanished: A Tale of Lies, Death and Smuggling

Millennia ago a piece of the sky fell toward East Africa, streaking overhead, born of an ancient collision of asteroids. The meteorite landed, probably with more of a thud than a boom, in a river valley where camels now forage near the village of El Ali in Somalia. Known locally as Shiid-birood (the iron rock), the El Ali meteorite is 13.6 metric tons of iron and nickel.
Science
fromHarvard Gazette
3 hours ago

Methane tracking satellite lost in space - what now? - Harvard Gazette

MethaneSAT, which its builders say is the most advanced methane-imaging satellite ever put in orbit, sought to globally map, then track emissions of methane, a greenhouse gas far more potent than carbon dioxide. Their aim is to spur action to plug leaks, initially from the oil and gas industry, as a way to significantly lower near-term warming of the atmosphere. The satellite's main instrument, a highly sensitive spectrometer that can detect methane sources from space with unparalleled precision.
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fromBig Think
14 hours ago

The "most distant explosion ever" turned out to be rocket debris

A transiting Earth-orbiting satellite, rather than an extragalactic explosion, caused the ultraviolet flash observed from GN-z11.
Science
fromTechCrunch
9 hours ago

Commonwealth Fusion Systems books a $1B+ power deal for its future fusion reactor | TechCrunch

Commonwealth Fusion Systems will sell over $1 billion of power from its first 400-megawatt Arc fusion reactor, with output deals including Eni and Google.
Science
fromMail Online
5 hours ago

World's first shark THREESOME is caught on camera

Two male leopard sharks sequentially mated with one female off New Caledonia, producing the first recorded shark threesome and lasting 110 seconds.
Science
fromwww.nature.com
20 hours ago

Decoding the redox behaviour of copper in Ullmann-type coupling reactions

Cu(I) reacts with an electron-poor aryl iodide via a Cu(I)/Cu(III)/Cu(II)/Cu(III)/Cu(I) redox sequence culminating in C(sp2)-CF3 bond formation.
Science
fromIrish Independent
8 hours ago

Trump administration set to link paracetamol to autism in stance drawing criticism and worry

No causal link exists between paracetamol use in pregnancy and autism; robust sibling-based studies found no relationship, and experts warn stigma harms maternal care.
#starship
Science
fromBustle
5 hours ago

This Is The Luckiest Day Of Fall 2025

Autumn 2025 brings renewed cosmic optimism as Jupiter in Cancer forms favorable planetary trines, easing recent retrograde and eclipse growing pains and increasing luck.
Science
fromMail Online
12 hours ago

Say goodbye to summer! Autumn officially begins TONIGHT

Autumn begins at the September equinox when the sun is over the equator, making day and night nearly equal and leading to shorter, cooler days.
Science
fromMail Online
10 hours ago

Scientists baffled by black hole growing at 2.4x the theoretical limit

Supermassive black hole RACS J0320-35, about a billion solar masses and 12.8 billion light-years away, is accreting at 2.4 times the theoretical limit.
fromMail Online
1 day ago

Inside China's secret lab rewriting our understanding of the universe

Deep underneath a granite hill in southern China, an enormous detector is sniffing out the secrets of the universe. This futuristic underground observatory has been built with the sole purpose of detecting neutrinos - tiny cosmic particles with a mind-bogglingly small mass. To date, nobody knows what these 'ghost particles' are or how they work. But scientists hope this $300 million lab will be able to answer these questions - vital to understanding the building blocks of the universe.
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fromwww.dw.com
1 day ago

Mapping the world's oceans a blessing or a curse? DW 09/21/2025

Most of the ocean floor remains unmapped; Seabed 2030 aims to map it by 2030 because radar satellites cannot penetrate water.
fromMail Online
1 day ago

Women could soon have 'virgin births' WITHOUT men, experts say

Known by scientists as 'parthenogenesis', this natural form of asexual reproduction lets healthy offspring develop from a female's unfertilised eggs. Only last month, a female lizard at a zoo near Birmingham gave birth to eight hatchlings, despite never having been in contact with a male. But virgin births have already occurred in a wide range of animals such as sharks, snakes, crocodiles, crustaceans, scorpions and wasps.
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fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Why Are Men Always So Warm?

Testosterone increases mitochondrial uncoupling and muscle heat production, causing men to be warmer, burn more fat, and generate more free radicals.
fromPsychology Today
22 hours ago

Who Do People Make Risky Decisions?

Recently I was invited to participate in a podcast on risky decisions. The specific incident was the death of a hiker who had deliberately chosen a route that was known to be really dangerous. Why would any rational person choose to expose himself or herself to this degree of risk? That's what my interviewer asked me. But beyond the question was the interviewer's mindset - you have to be crazy to voluntarily put yourself in a position where you are risking your life.
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fromTasting Table
1 day ago

Why You Should Never Store Bananas And Pears In The Same Fruit Bowl - Tasting Table

Ethylene gas from certain fruits, especially bananas and pears, accelerates ripening and causes nearby produce to overripen quickly.
fromThe Local Germany
2 days ago

How drinking (a little) alcohol boosts your ability to speak a foreign language

"drunken Germans usually pronounce Dutch better than sober Germans," they said in a statement read at the ceremony.
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Science
fromThe Local France
2 days ago

How drinking (a little) alcohol boosts your ability to speak a foreign language

Modest alcohol consumption (about less than a pint) can improve pronunciation and fluency in a recently learned foreign language by reducing language anxiety.
fromwww.thelocal.com
2 days ago

How drinking (a little) alcohol boosts your ability to speak a foreign language

Enjoying a beer or two - but not too many - can help you speak a foreign language more clearly, a prize winning scientific study claims. It's a study aid that many language learners have turned to over the years, but now it's been confirmed by scientists - drinking a little booze can help you speak a foreign lingo more clearly.
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fromFuturism
2 days ago

Scientists Debate to Halt Type of Research That Could Destroy All Life on Earth Should Be Halted

Research into mirror-life organisms risks creating unstoppable, predator-free invasive entities that could devastate ecosystems, agriculture, and human health.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

Huge crater under North Sea was created by asteroid impact, scientists say

The Silverpit crater beneath the North Sea was likely formed by a 43-million-year-old asteroid or comet impact, producing a two-mile crater and 100m tsunami.
fromWIRED
2 days ago

Big Tech Dreams of Putting Data Centers in Space

For one thing, the systems he imagines process data relatively slowly compared to those on terra firma. They'd be constantly bombarded by radiation, and "obsolescence would be a problem" because making repairs or upgrades would be confoundingly difficult. Hajimiri believes that data centers in space could, someday, be a viable solution but hesitates to say when that day might come. "Definitely it would be doable in a few years," he said. "The question is how effective they would be, and how cost-effective they would become."
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fromMail Online
2 days ago

Scientists find proof an ASTEROID hit Yorkshire 43 million years ago

A 160-metre asteroid struck the seabed off Yorkshire 43 million years ago, creating the Silverpit Crater and confirming an impact origin.
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fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Brain Health and Mental Capacity Depend on Physical Activity

Physical activity directly improves brain health through systemic adaptations and muscle- and organ-derived chemical signals (exerkines), enhancing cognition across the lifespan.
#ig-nobel-prizes
fromABC7 Los Angeles
3 days ago
Science

Does painting cows with stripes prevent fly bites? Researchers who studied this win Ig Nobel prize

Painting cows with zebra-like white stripes reduced fly attraction and apparent fly annoyance, though scaling the method may be difficult.
fromFast Company
3 days ago
Science

Painted cows and pasta sauce physics: A look at this year's Ig Nobel Prize winners

Ig Nobel winners received humorous trophies for quirky studies, including zebra-striped cows that reduced fly bother and research on alcohol improving foreign-language speaking.
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fromMail Online
2 days ago

Earliest images of mysterious interstellar object reveal alien origins

3I/ATLAS emitted gas while still about six AU from the Sun, indicating an unusual volatile composition distinct from typical solar-system comets.
Science
fromFuturism
2 days ago

Astronomers Spot Something "Totally Unexpected" at Event Horizon of Supermassive Black Hole

M87*'s magnetic-field polarization flipped between 2017 and 2021, indicating dynamic, complex magnetic structures near the event horizon affecting accretion and outflows.
Science
fromFast Company
2 days ago

Fall equinox 2025 is arriving along with a partial solar eclipse in the Southern Hemisphere. You can stream it live

The fall equinox on September 22 marks astronomical autumn while a partial solar eclipse will be visible in parts of the Southern Hemisphere.
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fromBusiness Insider
2 days ago

Forget Paleo - here's what we should really learn from our ancient ancestors about longevity, says a researcher

Close social bonds, lifelong learning, regular movement, and moderate diets in traditional hunter-gatherer lifestyles promote resilience and longer, healthier lives.
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fromNature
3 days ago

Reviving the past and designing the future: Books in brief

Symbiosis often involves exploitation; sex and gender roles are flexible in nature and humans; Victorian era blended arts, science and religion before fragmentation.
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fromNature
3 days ago

How a mentoring connection boosted my ambitions for a science career

Mentorship with a NASA JPL carbon-cycle researcher provided hands-on research experience, exposure to scientific careers, and guidance on literature review, publishing, and Arctic tipping-point research.
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fromNature
3 days ago

Apocalypse then: how cataclysms shaped human societies

Cataclysmic events repeatedly reshaped human societies; modern archaeology reveals patterns of resilience, adaptation, and societal transformation across history.
Science
fromHarvard Business Review
3 days ago

How to Create Harmony Between Your Personal and Professional Goals

Marie Curie balanced pioneering scientific work with single motherhood, integrating her daughters into her scientific life, enabling her eldest to win a Nobel Prize.
Science
fromTheregister
3 days ago

Court lets NSF keep swinging axe at $1B in research grants

A US court allowed the NSF to proceed with cancelling over 1,700 research grants totaling more than $1 billion.
Science
fromBig Think
3 days ago

Ask Ethan: What is the true purpose of scientific peer review?

Passing peer review indicates a paper met publication standards, but does not guarantee that every method, analysis, result, or conclusion is correct.
fromBoston.com
2 days ago

Does painting cows with stripes prevent fly bites? Researchers who studied this win Ig Nobel prize

"When I did this experiment, I hoped that I would win the Ig Nobel. It's my dream. Unbelievable. Just unbelievable," said Tomoki Kojima, whose team put tape on Japanese beef cows and then spray-painted them with white stripes. Kojima appeared on stage in stripes and was surrounded by his fellow researchers who harassed him with cardboard flies.
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fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

Incoming: New Era of Child Choosing Approaches

With IVF, prospective parents already have options to screen embryos, not just for sex or severe genetic diseases, but increasingly for a full range of genetic traits. Thanks to whole genome sequencing (WGS), the choice isn't science fiction; we can now analyze all 20,000+ human genes in an embryo with better than 99.9 percent accuracy for many mutations and chromosomal problems (assuming parents are willing to forego natural conception, and instead supply their eggs and sperm to a lab for embryo creation and analysis).
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fromBig Think
3 days ago

5 brilliant books to demystify the brain

Franz Joseph Gall proposed mental faculties localized to skull-shaped brain regions, sparking phrenology, now discredited but historically influential in the development of neuroscience.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Experience: I lived underwater for 100 days

Extended exposure to 70% higher atmospheric pressure and 100 days of confined undersea living produces measurable physical and psychological effects relevant to space missions.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 days ago

Want to Get Away? NASA Now Offers More Than 6,000 Alien Worlds to Daydream About

Confirmed exoplanet count has surpassed 6,000, reaching 6,007, with many newly confirmed rocky planets between Earth and Neptune identified by TESS, Kepler, and ground telescopes.
Science
fromTheregister
3 days ago

Japan ends 'Dawn' Venus mission after 15 turbulent years

JAXA has terminated operations of the Akatsuki Venus orbiter after losing contact in April 2024 and failing recovery attempts.
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Kenya's Turkana people genetically adapted to live in harsh environment, study suggests

Centuries of natural selection produced genetic adaptations—notably changes in the kidney-expressed STC1 gene—enabling Turkana pastoralists to tolerate dehydration and purine-rich diets.
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fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

The Lithium Link to Alzheimer's

Low brain lithium associates with Alzheimer's pathology; lithium supplementation, especially lithium orotate, reduces amyloid/tau buildup and improves memory in mice.
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fromMail Online
3 days ago

Expert warns of looming mass extinction that risks wiping out humanity

A rapid geomagnetic pole shift triggered by a solar 'micronova' could cause tsunamis, climate chaos, and wipe out up to 90% of humanity.
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fromNature
3 days ago

Atomic 'conveyor belt' boosts power of quantum computer

A conveyor-belt system of optical tweezers continuously replenishes neutral-atom arrays, overcoming atom loss and enabling scalable neutral-atom quantum computing.
Science
fromTheregister
3 days ago

Hayabusa2's next asteroid isn't much bigger than the probe

Hayabusa2's next target, asteroid 1998 KY26, is about 11 meters wide and rotates every five minutes, increasing mission difficulty and planning challenges.
Science
fromMail Online
3 days ago

NASA reveals what space 'sushi' looks like - 'fancy prison food'

Astronauts aboard the International Space Station prepared improvised sushi and shrimp cocktail adapted for microgravity, prompting mixed public reactions and reflecting shelf-stable, mess-free requirements.
Science
fromFast Company
3 days ago

This startup uses plants-not a huge mine-to pull a critical mineral out of the ground

Genomines uses gene-edited hyperaccumulator daisies to phytomine nickel from low-grade soils, offering a scalable, lower-impact alternative to traditional mining for battery and stainless-steel metals.
fromMail Online
3 days ago

Scientists reveal odds a black hole will EXPLODE in the next 10 years

It sounds like something from the latest science fiction blockbuster. But scientists in Massachusetts have revealed the terrifyingly high odds a black hole will explode in the next 10 years. In a new paper, they say there's a 90 per cent chance of at least one black hole exploding by 2035. If and when it happens, telescopes positioned in space and here on Earth should be able to capture the event - which fortunately won't be dangerous for Earthlings.
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fromArs Technica
3 days ago

Chimps consume alcohol equivalent of nearly 2 drinks a day

Wild chimpanzees regularly consume naturally occurring ethanol in ripe fruit, producing chronic low-level alcohol exposure comparable to nearly two drinks per day.
fromNature
3 days ago

World's first AI-designed viruses a step towards AI-generated life

This is the first time AI systems are able to write coherent genome-scale sequences", says Brian Hie, a computational biologist at Stanford University, California. "The next step is AI-generated life", says Hie, but his colleague Samuel King adds that "a lot of experimental advances need to occur in order to design an entire living organism". The study, by Hie, King and colleagues, was posted on the preprint server bioRxivon 17 September and is not yet peer reviewed,
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fromArs Technica
2 days ago

After a very slow start, Europe's reusable rocket program shows signs of life

This week, the France-based ArianeGroup aerospace company announced that it had completed the integration of the Themis vehicle, a prototype rocket that will test various landing technologies, on a launch pad in Sweden. Low-altitude hop tests, a precursor for developing a rocket's first stage that can vertically land after an orbital launch, could start late this year or early next.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 days ago

Skibidi' and Brain Rot' Are Part of Millennia-Old Patterns of Language Evolution

Algorithms and social media accelerate language change, producing novel words that follow historical linguistic patterns and serve important social functions.
fromWIRED
3 days ago

How Energy-Generating Sidewalks Work

When you start thinking about it, the possibilities are endless. But how does it work? And how much power can it generate? Obviously one person wouldn't make much difference, but convert the teeming sidewalks of New York and you might really have something. Could we put this all over the world and stop using fossil fuels? Let's find out! Follow the Bouncing Ball
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fromFuturism
3 days ago

Scientists Intrigued by Mysterious Object Floating Near Earth

Near-Earth asteroid 2025 PN7 is a tiny quasi-moon that has followed Earth for about 60 years while remaining unbound and will depart that configuration in roughly 60 years.
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fromArs Technica
3 days ago

Rocket Report: European rocket reuse test delayed; NASA tweaks SLS for Artemis II

A potential US government shutdown threatens NASA science missions and Artemis II timing, while commercial launch companies raise capital and adjust launch schedules.
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fromGameSpot
3 days ago

You Like Your Controls Inverted Because Of Science--And Your Brain

Controller inversion preference reflects how individual brains perceive 3D space and is shaped by personal experience, games, genre, age, and input habits.
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Red squirrel population thriving on Isle of Wight and could almost double, study finds

Red squirrels on the Isle of Wight are thriving, with enough food and habitat to nearly double, two genetic groups mixing, totaling about 3,500.
Science
fromConde Nast Traveler
3 days ago

The Last Solar Eclipse of 2025 Will Be Visible From This Island Nation

On September 22, 2025, New Zealand will experience a sunrise partial solar eclipse obscuring up to about 72–86% of the Sun, producing a crescent sunrise.
Science
fromBustle
3 days ago

This Year's Autumnal Equinox Will Be Extra Amazing For 2 Zodiac Signs

The 2025 autumn equinox on Sept. 22 ushers in Libra season amid a Virgo new moon solar eclipse and Mars entering Scorpio, intensifying transformational energy.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 days ago

How Do You Weigh a Black Hole?

Black hole masses are measured via gravitational effects on companions, accretion radiation, and gravitational-wave signals across stellar to supermassive scales.
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fromNature
5 days ago

Daily briefing: Can AI help us talk to animals?

Scientists are using AI and mapping techniques to decode animal communication, digitize historical weather records, and reveal deep-Earth and comb-jelly nervous-system changes.
Science
fromSlate Magazine
4 days ago

Which Type of Chemical Compound Exhibits Properties of Both an Acid and a Base?

Weekday science quizzes provide unique, challenging questions with score comparison and a leaderboard for competitive play and social score sharing.
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