Read More Scince News Health 9 hours ago This Gut Bacterium May Hold the Key to Staying Strong New research links the gut bacterium Roseburia inulinivorans to stronger muscles in humans and mice, suggesting a potential probiotic route to counter age-related muscle loss while highlighting key limitations and next steps.
Read More Scince News Space 13 hours ago Tianwen-2's First Close-Up of Earth's 'Minimoon' Kamoʻoalewa China’s Tianwen-2 probe has sent the first close-up image of Kamoʻoalewa, Earth’s rare quasi-satellite. The mission will sample the tiny 'minimoon' and later visit main-belt comet 311P to study solar-system origins.
Read More Scince News Health 17 hours ago Young Women Seven Times More Likely to Be Sent Home Young women are far more likely than men to be sent home during a heart attack because their symptoms are often labeled 'atypical.' This article explores the data, causes, and practical steps for patients and clinicians.
Read More Scince News Nature 21 hours ago Seafloor Surprise: 73 Hidden Volcanic Calderas Found Using an AI-retooled crater detector, researchers uncovered 73 previously unknown submarine calderas—tripling the number on record—and mapped where these hidden volcanic collapses cluster on the seafloor.
Read More Scince News Nature 23 hours ago How a Spider Catapults Ants into the Air with Silk A newly observed Propostira spider in northern Queensland uses a spring-loaded silk cone to fling green tree ants into its web. Fieldwork and biomechanical analysis reveal extreme forces and species-specific luring.
Read More Scince News Nature a day ago How Long Will Earth's Plants Survive? 1.87 Billion Years New climate simulations indicate Earth's plants could survive until about 1.87 billion years from now, limited by CO2 decline or extreme heat. Evolution or technology could stretch that timeline further.
Read More Scince News Health a day ago New Study Links Coffee Drinking to Lower Liver Risk A UK Biobank study of 350,000+ people followed for 13 years found that regular coffee — caffeinated or decaf — is linked to lower risks of cirrhosis, liver cancer, and liver-related death, likely by reducing inflammation and fibrosis.
Read More Scince News Scientific 2 days ago How Quantum Twins Reveal Secrets of the Invisible Universe A prototype from Imperial College demonstrates that paired long-baseline atom interferometers, read by the same laser, can cancel overwhelming phase noise and recover faint signals, advancing searches for dark matter and primordial gravitational waves.
Read More Scince News Nature 2 days ago Meet the World's Fastest Spider — It Can Outsprint You A lab survey of 258 spider species finds a Queensland huntsman sprints at nearly 3.6 m/s (over 8 mph), faster than many humans. The study links leg length, body size and hunting style to top speed.
Read More Scince News Space 2 days ago Ozone Damage Began Decades Before the Antarctic Hole A new MIT study finds human-driven ozone decline began around 1957, decades before the 1985 Antarctic hole discovery. Ice cores and models point to carbon tetrachloride as the early culprit, reshaping the timeline of ozone damage.
Read More Scince News Space 2 days ago A Neighbor 25 Light-Years Away Could Harbor Life, Maybe New measurements suggest GJ 3378b—a planet 25 light-years away orbiting a red dwarf—may be a rocky world in its star's habitable zone. Its lower mass raises hopes for an atmosphere and liquid water, but more observations are needed.
Read More Scince News Space 2 days ago Hubble Reveals Red, White and Blue Stellar Nursery in LMC Hubble’s striking image of LH 95 in the Large Magellanic Cloud shows blue young stars and crimson hydrogen gas, revealing about 2,500 pre-main-sequence stars, prolonged accretion, and multiple stellar generations.
Read More Scince News Space 3 days ago Webb Reveals a Hydrogen-Rich Lava World 41 Light-Years Away JWST spectroscopy of five eclipses indicates 55 Cancri e likely hosts a hydrogen-rich atmosphere, with abundant CO and variable outgassing from a reduced magma ocean shaping transient clouds over its molten dayside.
Read More Scince News Health 3 days ago Why Intermittent Fasting May Beat Traditional Dieting An 18-month University of Adelaide trial finds intermittent fasting and calorie restriction led to similar weight loss, but fasting felt less mentally burdensome—suggesting personalized strategies may work best.
Read More Scince News Health 3 days ago Why Erectile Dysfunction Often Signals Hidden Disease Erectile dysfunction may be more than a sexual-health issue. New reviews and a medical volume argue ED can precede heart disease, type 2 diabetes and other chronic conditions, suggesting it could serve as an early biomarker.
Read More Scince News Health 3 days ago Vagus Nerve Implant Shows Lasting Relief in Depression A major US trial finds implanted vagus nerve stimulation can deliver durable improvement for some people with severe, treatment‑resistant depression, with many retaining benefits at two years.
Read More Scince News Health 4 days ago Gut Bacterium Restores Balance, Tames Lupus Symptoms UT Health researchers found that restoring Faecalibacterium prausnitzii in lupus-prone mice raised butyrate, repaired gut lining and reduced kidney inflammation, pointing to microbial or metabolite-based therapies.
Read More Scince News Nature 4 days ago Face Mites Are Merging with Humans - A Quiet Evolution Tiny mites live their entire lives in human facial follicles. New genomic research shows Demodex folliculorum shedding genes and adapting to us, hinting at a shift from parasite to obligate symbiont and raising questions about our shared evolution.
Read More Scince News Health 4 days ago Hidden Blood Vessel Damage Behind Common Stroke Revealed New imaging research links lacunar stroke not to plaque in large arteries but to enlargement and damage of tiny brain vessels, explaining why antiplatelet drugs often fail and pointing to new microvascular treatments.
Read More Scince News Nature 5 days ago Why Sinking Cities Make Sea-Level Rise Far Worse Worldwide New research finds urban land subsidence—driven by groundwater pumping, resource extraction and the weight of cities—is accelerating local sea-level rise in coastal megacities, worsening flood risk but offering policy levers.