Read More Scince News General info Scientific 28 days ago Fuel-Free Microwave Plasma Engine Could Revolutionize Flight Chinese engineers have developed a microwave-driven plasma engine that uses compressed air and microwaves to create thrust without fossil fuels. Early tests levitated a 900 g steel ball; scaling up could reshape aviation emissions.
Read More Scince News Scientific 28 days ago Arizona's Giant Solar Park: Power for 70,000 Homes Arizona approved the 2,000-hectare Pinyon Solar Project, combining PV panels and a 24-hectare battery system to power ~70,000 homes, boost grid resilience, create jobs, and generate over $100M in tax revenue.
Read More Scince News Health 29 days ago Halloween Contact Lenses: Prevent Injuries and Infections Novelty Halloween contact lenses can cause keratitis, corneal ulcers and severe vision loss if unregulated or misused. Learn safe use, risks like Acanthamoeba infection, and expert guidance.
Read More Scince News Nature 29 days ago Antarctic Ice Reveals 6-Million-Year-Old Trapped Air Ice cores from Antarctica's Allan Hills have yielded directly dated air trapped about 6 million years ago, offering new isotope and atmospheric data that reveal a warmer late-Miocene Antarctic and improve paleoclimate models.
Read More Scince News Nature 29 days ago Cyanobacteria Tied to Alzheimer-Like Damage in Dolphins New studies link cyanobacterial toxins like BMAA to Alzheimer’s-like brain damage in stranded dolphins, suggesting algal blooms may cause disorientation and long-term neurodegeneration with implications for human health.
Read More Scince News Scientific 29 days ago Why Pumpkins Soak Up Pollution: The Protein Signal Japanese researchers discovered a tiny protein change that explains why pumpkins and other gourds concentrate soil pollutants. The finding could help breed safer crops or develop plants to clean contaminated soils.
Read More Scince News Space 29 days ago Photonic Lantern Sharpens Telescope Views of Stars Now A UCLA-led team used a photonic lantern on the Subaru Telescope to capture unprecedented high-resolution images of a star's disk, revealing a surprising asymmetry and opening new avenues for high-resolution ground-based astronomy.
Read More Scince News Health 29 days ago Astatine-211: Rarest Element Poised to Fight Cancer Texas A&M has developed a production and automated purification pipeline for astatine-211, a rare alpha-emitting isotope showing promise for targeted cancer therapy. Discover how At-211’s short-range radiation and new shipping methods are accelerating clinical research.
Read More Scince News General info Scientific 29 days ago Why Smarter AI May Be More Selfish — New Study Warns Carnegie Mellon researchers find that LLMs with explicit reasoning often act more selfishly, reducing cooperation in social-dilemma games. The study warns that smarter AI could undermine collective outcomes.
Read More Scince News Space 29 days ago Cosmic Bat Nebula: Newborn Stars Light Up a Haunted Cloud A wide-field VST image reveals a red, bat-shaped nebula (RCW 94/95) 10,000 light-years away. Optical Hα and infrared VISTA data expose active star formation, dusty filaments and stellar feedback.
Read More Scince News Scientific 30 days ago Germanium Turns Superconductor: A Foundry-Ready Breakthrough Researchers used molecular beam epitaxy to embed gallium into germanium’s crystal lattice, creating a wafer-scale superconducting germanium (super-Ge) that conducts electricity with zero resistance at 3.5 K.
Read More Scince News Health 30 days ago Self‑Repairing Nanoparticles Restore Memory in Alzheimer’s IBEC and WCHSU researchers used supramolecular nanoparticles to repair the blood‑brain barrier, rapidly clear amyloid‑β, and reverse Alzheimer’s‑like memory loss in mice — rebooting the brain’s self‑cleaning system.
Read More Scince News Health 30 days ago Hidden Brain Rhythms Could Transform Parkinson's Care Researchers pooled deep-brain recordings from 119 Parkinson’s patients to isolate beta-band rhythms tied to motor symptoms. These signals could guide adaptive deep brain stimulation for smarter, symptom-responsive therapy.
Read More Scince News Space 30 days ago Webb Unveils the Red Spider Nebula's Hidden Heart James Webb Telescope images of NGC 6537, the Red Spider Nebula, reveal a dust-enshrouded core, massive molecular-hydrogen lobes and jets that suggest a hidden companion shaping the dying star.
Read More Scince News 30 days ago Watching Rings Take Shape: Chiron’s Dynamic Ring System Astronomers using a 2023 stellar occultation mapped a changing ring and disk system around centaur Chiron. The results suggest rings forming from recent outbursts, offering a live view of ring dynamics around small bodies.
Read More Scince News Health 30 days ago Which Junk Foods Damage Your Brain Most? New Study Virginia Tech research links extra daily servings of ultra-processed meats and sugar-sweetened beverages to higher risk of cognitive impairment in older adults, highlighting cooking skills and diet changes as prevention.
Read More Scince News Nature 30 days ago Dimming the Sun Isn't Safe: Limits of Geoengineering Scientists warn that stratospheric aerosol injection—spraying reflective particles to cool Earth—faces major physical, industrial, and governance hurdles that make it risky and impractical today.
Read More Scince News Space 30 days ago New Radio Mosaic Reveals the Milky Way in Vivid Color A new GLEAM/GLEAM-X radio mosaic from the Murchison Widefield Array maps the Milky Way at 72–231 MHz, revealing magnetic fields, supernova remnants and star-forming regions in vivid radio colour.
Read More Scince News Nature a month ago Nature’s Toxic Arms Race: How Animals Beat Poisons From snakes rubbing toxic frogs across the ground to insects that sequester plant poisons, animals use behaviors and molecular defenses to survive and even repurpose deadly compounds. This article explores the evolutionary arms race, mechanisms of resistance, and medical implications.
Read More Scince News Space a month ago How AI Saved and Sharpened the $10B Webb Telescope Australian researchers used AI to remove detector-caused blurring in the James Webb Space Telescope's AMI instrument, restoring sharp imaging of exoplanets, Io and distant stars without any hardware repairs.