Read More Scince News Nature 3 months ago Marine Heatwaves Disrupt Ocean Carbon Conveyor Belt New research finds marine heatwaves disrupt the ocean's biological carbon pump, trapping carbon in surface and twilight layers. Autonomous floats and ship surveys reveal how plankton shifts weaken the ocean's capacity to sequester CO2.
Read More Scince News Health 3 months ago Shared Genetic Roots Link Eight Psychiatric Disorders A Cell study maps pleiotropic gene variants that link eight psychiatric disorders, showing how shared genetic regulation during brain development may explain co-occurrence and point to common therapeutic targets.
Read More Scince News Health 3 months ago Decades of Evidence Link Finasteride to Suicide Risk A new review links finasteride—a common hair-loss drug—to increased risks of depression, suicidal ideation, and persistent psychiatric symptoms, urging stronger pharmacovigilance and clearer patient warnings.
Read More Scince News Space 3 months ago Rogue Planet Gorges at Record Six Billion Tonnes Per Second A free-floating planet, Cha 1107-7626, is accreting gas and dust at an unprecedented six billion tonnes per second. New VLT and JWST observations suggest star-like formation processes and strong magnetic funneling.
Read More Scince News Space 3 months ago Why It Rains on the Sun: Elemental Shifts Explain It University of Hawai‘i researchers find that time-varying elemental abundances—especially iron—drive rapid 'solar rain' in flares, improving coronal models and space weather forecasts.
Read More Scince News Scientific 3 months ago 112-Million-Year-Old Insects Found in Ecuador Amber Amber from Ecuador’s Hollín Formation has yielded 112-million-year-old insects and plant remains. The discovery fills a major southern-hemisphere gap in the Cretaceous fossil record and reveals ancient Gondwana forest ecology.
Read More Scince News Space 3 months ago Hubble Reveals NGC 6000: Old and New Stars in Color Hubble’s image of spiral galaxy NGC 6000 (102 million ly away) shows an older golden core and bright blue star‑forming arms, plus supernova echoes and colored asteroid streaks from multi‑filter exposures.
Read More Scince News Space 3 months ago Moon's Two Faces: Far Side's Cooler Deep Mantle Revealed Analysis of Chang'e 6 lunar samples reveals the Moon's far side formed from magma about 70–100 °C cooler than the near side, implying a deep thermal asymmetry linked to uneven heat-producing elements and early impacts.
Read More Scince News Health 3 months ago Nicotinamide Cuts Skin Cancer Recurrence Risk by 54% A large VA analysis of 33,833 patients finds that nicotinamide (vitamin B3) taken at 500 mg twice daily may lower the risk of subsequent basal cell and squamous cell carcinomas—up to 54% when started after a first skin cancer.
Read More Scince News Health 3 months ago Rethinking Lymph Node Removal in Cancer Surgery Today New laboratory research suggests lymph nodes do more than stage cancer — they sustain anti-tumour immune cells. This article reviews risks and benefits of lymph node removal and emerging immune-preserving surgical strategies.
Read More Scince Health Editor's choice 3 months ago Large Study Links Viral Infections to Alzheimer's Risk A large retrospective analysis of nearly 500,000 medical records found repeated links between serious viral infections—such as encephalitis, pneumonia, and shingles—and elevated risk of Alzheimer's and other neurodegenerative diseases.
Read More Scince News Space 3 months ago NASA's ESCAPADE Heads to Mars on Blue Origin New Glenn NASA's ESCAPADE twin-spacecraft mission will launch to Mars on Blue Origin's New Glenn in fall 2025 to study solar wind-driven atmospheric escape and the Martian plasma environment.
Read More Scince News Health 3 months ago Sulfur Dioxide Exposure Linked to Higher ALS Risk Study A Canadian case-control study finds a significant association between long-term residential sulfur dioxide (SO2) exposure and increased ALS risk, urging tighter air-quality controls and further research.
Read More Scince News Nature 3 months ago Tiny Cretaceous Fish Rewrites Freshwater Evolution A 4 cm Cretaceous fossil, Acronichthys maccognoi, reveals the oldest North American otophysan and suggests multiple marine-to-freshwater transitions in fish evolution.
Read More Scince News Health 3 months ago Blood Test Detects HPV Head & Neck Cancer Years Early HPV-DeepSeek, a blood-based liquid biopsy, detects HPV-linked head and neck cancers up to a decade before symptoms, offering potential for earlier, less invasive treatment.
Read More Scince News Nature 3 months ago Fungi Shaped Earth Long Before Land Plants Emerged New genomic analysis indicates fungi diversified hundreds of millions of years before land plants, shaping soils and enabling terrestrial life.
Read More Scince News Space 3 months ago Dwarf Galaxies Lit the Cosmic Dawn, New JWST Evidence New JWST and Hubble analyses indicate abundant dwarf galaxies produced the ionizing photons that completed cosmic reionization during the Universe's cosmic dawn.
Read More Scince News Scientific 3 months ago Protein Nanowire Artificial Neuron Mimics Brain Signals UMass Amherst engineers build a protein-nanowire artificial neuron that operates at biological voltages, enabling energy-efficient neuromorphic computing and brain interfaces.
Read More Scince News Nature 3 months ago Sand-sized Stones Reveal Earth's Early Carbon History Tiny iron-oxide ooids reveal ancient oceans held far less dissolved organic carbon, forcing a rethink of oxygenation, ice ages, and early life.
Read More Scince Scientific 3 months ago China Tests Effects of Three Rapid-Fire Nuclear Strikes Laboratory simulations show three rapid nuclear strikes produce far larger craters than a single blast, with big implications for bunker design and strategic stability.