Read More Scince News Scientific 2 months ago How an Ancient Fossil Rewrote Freshwater Fish Hearing A 67-million-year-old fossil reveals that sensitive hearing in freshwater fish evolved after multiple migrations from the sea. CT scans, genomic data and vibration models revise otophysan origins and biodiversity drivers.
Read More Scince News Health 2 months ago Single Dose of Gut Bacteria Cuts Long-Term Metabolic Risk A University of Auckland follow-up shows one capsule of healthy gut bacteria delivered years-old benefits: reduced metabolic syndrome in obese adolescents and persistent microbial changes—pointing toward future targeted probiotics.
Read More Scince News Space 2 months ago Hubble Reveals NGC 6951's Radiant Ring of Starbirth Hubble’s image of NGC 6951 reveals a glowing circumnuclear starburst ring fueled by a central bar. Learn how gas inflow creates intense star formation and why astronomers repeatedly study this galaxy.
Read More Scince News Nature 2 months ago North Atlantic Right Whale: A Fragile Recovery at Sea The critically endangered North Atlantic right whale shows small population gains in 2024, with eight new calves and an estimated 384 animals. Recovery is fragile due to ship strikes and fishing entanglement; conservation measures remain essential.
Read More Scince News Health 2 months ago Two Existing Drugs Show Promise for Early Alzheimer's A U.S. safety trial finds that empagliflozin and an intranasal insulin spray show early, safe benefits on biomarkers, cognition, and brain blood flow in people at risk of Alzheimer’s disease.
Read More Scince News General info 2 months ago Rising Seas Threaten Millions of Coastal Buildings Global modeling suggests 45 million buildings could be inundated with 5 m sea-level rise and over 130 million with 20 m. These conservative estimates exclude erosion and storm surge, highlighting urgent planning needs.
Read More Scince News Health 2 months ago Split-Second Food Judgments: How Your Brain Sees Health New research shows the brain encodes healthiness and tastiness of foods within ~200 ms of seeing them. Advanced brain imaging and machine learning reveal two rapid dimensions — processed and appetizing — that shape snap dietary decisions.
Read More Scince News Space 2 months ago Bizarre Titan Crystals That Defy a Chemistry Rule — New Study Laboratory experiments and computer models suggest hydrogen cyanide on Titan can form stable co-crystals with methane and ethane at -180 °C, challenging the 'like dissolves like' rule and altering interpretations of Titan's surface and prebiotic chemistry.
Read More Scince News Space 2 months ago Hearing Black Holes Ring: Hawking’s Area Theorem Verified GW250114, a clarifying black hole merger detected by upgraded LIGO detectors, provided the strongest observational test yet of Hawking's black hole area theorem and revealed distinct ringdown modes.
Read More Scince News Scientific 2 months ago How a Solar-Powered Retinal Chip Is Restoring Sight A photovoltaic retinal implant is giving people with dry age-related macular degeneration partial central vision back. Learn how the PRIMA System works, patient stories, and clinical implications.
Read More Scince News Health 2 months ago Could Cholesterol Drugs Also Cut Dementia Risk? New Study A major genetic meta-analysis links lifelong lower LDL cholesterol with reduced dementia risk, suggesting statins and related drugs may offer brain-protective benefits and calling for long-term clinical trials.
Read More Scince News Health 2 months ago Prenatal PFAS Exposure Tied to Brain Changes in Children A multinational study links maternal PFAS blood levels to structural brain differences in five-year-olds, revealing compound-specific associations in the corpus callosum, hypothalamus and occipital grey matter.
Read More Scince News Space 2 months ago Could Dark Matter Be Behind the Milky Way's Gamma Glow? New Milky Way simulations show the galactic-center gamma-ray excess could come from flattened dark matter annihilation as easily as millisecond pulsars. Upcoming telescopes may settle the debate.
Read More Scince News Health 2 months ago Could Tylenol Make You Take More Risks? New Evidence New behavioral studies suggest acetaminophen (Tylenol/paracetamol) may slightly reduce negative emotion and increase risk-taking. Researchers call for more work on mechanisms, doses, and real-world impacts.
Read More Scince News Space 2 months ago Scientists Spot Proto-Earth Traces Hidden in Ancient Rocks MIT-led researchers detected a subtle potassium-40 deficit in ancient rocks that may preserve fragments of the proto-Earth predating the Moon-forming giant impact, challenging assumptions about early planetary mixing.
Read More Scince News Scientific 2 months ago What Keeps Spaghetti Intact? The Science of Gluten Lund University researchers used neutron scattering and X-rays to show that gluten stabilizes spaghetti during cooking and that salt in the water affects microstructure — findings that guide better gluten-free pasta design.
Read More Scince News Space 2 months ago Hidden Sun-Grazing Asteroid 2025 SC79 Discovered Near Earth Astronomers discovered 2025 SC79, a 700‑m Atira asteroid hidden near the Sun. With a 128‑day orbit inside Earth's path, it highlights detection limits, impact risks, and the need for improved twilight and space‑based surveys.
Read More Scince News Nature 2 months ago Mosquitoes Reach Iceland: First Wild Record Stirs Alarm Iceland has recorded its first wild mosquitoes—three Culiseta annulata north of Reykjavik. Scientists suspect human transport, not necessarily climate change, and urge monitoring for establishment.
Read More Scince News Health 2 months ago Why Weight Loss Isn’t Required to Reverse Prediabetes A 2025 international study finds that normalizing fasting blood sugar through diet and exercise can cut type 2 diabetes risk by up to 71%, even without significant weight loss. Visceral fat and glucose control matter more than the scale.
Read More Scince News Scientific 2 months ago Poisoned AI: Hidden Data Attacks Threaten Global Trust Small injections of malicious data can secretly corrupt large language models, creating backdoors, spreading misinformation, and raising new cybersecurity risks. Learn how poisoning works and what can be done.