Read More Scince News General info 2 months ago Fame and Shorter Lives: Why Stars Face Early Death A new epidemiological study finds that highly famous singers live on average 4.6 years less than less-famous musicians, linking media exposure, stress, and solo status to higher mortality risk.
Read More Scince News Nature 2 months ago How Thermal Runaway Supercharged the 2024 Calama Quake Researchers found that the 2024 Calama earthquake evolved from dehydration embrittlement into a thermal runaway, amplifying shaking at depth. The discovery changes how scientists assess seismic hazard in subduction zones.
Read More Scince News Nature 2 months ago 750 Million at Risk: Day Zero Droughts Accelerate Now New climate-model research warns that Day Zero Droughts — when water demand exceeds supply — will become widespread within decades, threatening about 750 million people and stressing reservoirs worldwide.
Read More Scince News Health 2 months ago One 30-Minute Workout Lifts Mood: The Biology Explained A 30-minute session of moderate exercise triggers the hormone adiponectin, which activates AdipoR1 and APPL1 in the medial prefrontal cortex, producing an immediate mood lift and suggesting new fast-acting antidepressant targets.
Read More Scince News Health 2 months ago Gut Bacteria That Produce Serotonin Could Transform IBS Care Researchers identified gut bacteria that can produce bioactive serotonin, revealing new paths for IBS therapies. The discovery links Limosilactobacillus mucosae and Ligilactobacillus ruminis to gut serotonin and motility.
Read More Scince News Space 2 months ago Balloon Telescope Reveals Polarized X-Rays Around Cygnus X-1 A balloon-borne telescope, XL-Calibur, captured the most precise polarized hard X-rays from Cygnus X-1, revealing how superheated gas and magnetic fields behave near a black hole and paving the way for future missions.
Read More Scince News Scientific 2 months ago Plant-Based Stealth: Carbon Coating Masks Chinese Jets Chinese researchers converted dried loofah into a 4 mm carbon‑nanoparticle coating that absorbs >99.99% of Ku‑band radar waves. The bio‑derived film could cut aircraft RCS dramatically.
Read More Scince News General info 2 months ago Italy's AI-Powered Michelangelo Dome: Europe's New Shield Leonardo unveils the Michelangelo Dome, an AI-driven, multi-domain air-defense system designed to protect Europe from drones, hypersonic missiles and maritime attacks, with phased deployment planned through 2028.
Read More Scince News Health 2 months ago Old Blood Pressure Drug Reveals New Cancer Targets Researchers uncovered how hydralazine works at the molecular level, explaining its effectiveness in preeclampsia and revealing potential vulnerabilities in glioblastoma—paving the way for safer, targeted therapies.
Read More Scince News Nature 2 months ago China's Supergiant Gold Finds Could Be Worth $80+ Billion Two "supergiant" gold deposits reported in China — Wangu and Dadonggou — could total over 2,000 metric tons. Experts caution that valuations depend on recoverability, grade, geology and market conditions.
Read More Scince News Space 2 months ago Why a Red Giant in Gaia BH2 Defies Stellar Theory Today A red giant in the Gaia BH2 system shows ancient alpha-element chemistry but a younger age from asteroseismology, pointing to past mergers or mass transfer in a dormant black hole binary.
Read More Scince News Health 2 months ago How Speech Speed Can Reveal Early Signs of Alzheimer's Researchers find that speech speed and pauses may signal early Alzheimer’s changes. Studies link slower speech to tau and amyloid markers, suggesting voice analysis could aid early detection and screening.
Read More Scince News Space 2 months ago Tiny Red Dots: Are Black Hole 'Stars' Behind JWST's Find JWST revealed compact, deeply red point sources in the early universe. New RUBIES spectra suggest some may be 'black hole stars' — accreting supermassive black holes wrapped in dense gas envelopes that mimic stellar photospheres.
Read More Scince News Space 2 months ago Gemini South Reveals Stunning New Image of Butterfly Nebula Gemini South marks its 25th anniversary with a striking new image of the Butterfly Nebula (NGC 6302), revealing ionized gases and a blazing white dwarf that illuminates stellar death and our Sun's future.
Read More Scince News Space 2 months ago Voyager 1 Reaches One Light-Day Distance from Earth 2026 NASA's Voyager 1 will become the first human-made object one light‑day from Earth on Nov 15, 2026, meaning a 24-hour one-way radio delay and a 48-hour command‑response cycle for mission teams.
Read More Scince News Space 2 months ago Boeing's Starliner Grounded for Crew Flights — What's Next? NASA has barred Boeing's Starliner from carrying astronauts on the next mission, reclassifying Starliner-1 (April 2026) as cargo-only after years of software and propulsion failures. What comes next for Boeing and ISS operations?
Read More Scince News Health 2 months ago Your Brain's Five Life Epochs: How Wiring Changes with Age A large MRI study of 3,802 people identifies four turning points—around ages 9, 32, 66 and 83—that divide life into five brain wiring epochs from childhood to late aging, with implications for health and interventions.
Read More Scince News Health 2 months ago Do Tattoos Raise Skin Cancer Risk? What We Know Today Recent research suggests a possible link between tattoos and melanoma but does not prove causation. Learn how ink chemistry, UV exposure and inflammation could play a role—and practical advice for tattooed skin.
Read More Scince News Health 2 months ago Black Friday and Your Brain: The Neuroscience Explained Black Friday’s timers, limited-stock alerts and social cues push the brain into fast, error-prone decisions. Learn the neuroscience behind urgency and scarcity, plus practical tactics to avoid impulse buys.
Read More Scince News Space 2 months ago Mars Hears Its Own Thunder: Perseverance Records Lightning NASA's Perseverance rover recorded 55 electrical discharges on Mars, including seven full captures with tiny sonic booms. The findings confirm dust-driven lightning on the Red Planet and have implications for hardware design, atmospheric chemistry, and astrobiology.