Read More Scince News Scientific a month ago Nanotyrannus Confirmed: A Small Tyrannosaur Species New hyoid-bone histology shows the Nanotyrannus holotype was an adult, supporting its status as a separate small tyrannosaur species and reshaping views of Late Cretaceous predator diversity.
Read More Scince News Scientific a month ago Molecules That Compute: Brain-Like, Shape-Shifting Chips IISc researchers engineered ruthenium-based molecular devices that switch between memory, logic and synapse-like roles. Their chemistry-driven approach could enable energy-efficient neuromorphic hardware.
Read More Scince News Space a month ago SpaceX Tops 165 Orbital Launches in 2025, New Record SpaceX smashed its annual launch record in 2025 with 165 orbital flights—mainly Falcon 9 missions—adding over 3,000 Starlink satellites and demonstrating growing reuse and cadence in commercial spaceflight.
Read More Scince News Nature a month ago How an Iridescent Berry Outsmarts Birds: Pollia's Trick Pollia condensata fruits use long-lasting structural color — not nutrition — to lure birds and disperse seeds. Researchers see biomimetic potential for durable, pigment-free colors in materials science.
Read More Scince News Health a month ago Drug Restores Cognition in Mice with Advanced Alzheimer's A study finds the drug candidate P7C3-A20 restores NAD+ levels and reverses cognitive decline in mice with advanced Alzheimer’s pathology, suggesting metabolic recovery could enable neuronal function despite plaques and tangles.
Read More Scince News Space a month ago Hubble Reveals NGC 4535: The Lost Galaxy Comes Alive Hubble's newest image of NGC 4535 reveals the 'Lost Galaxy' in Virgo, exposing young blue star clusters and glowing H II nebulae. The data, from PHANGS-HST, helps map star formation across nearby galaxies.
Read More Scince News Health a month ago Boosting Brain Blood Flow: PIP2's Promise for Dementia University of Vermont scientists found that restoring the membrane phospholipid PIP2 suppresses overactive Piezo1 channels in brain vessels, normalizing cerebral blood flow and suggesting a new approach to treating dementia.
Read More Scince News Health Editor's choice a month ago Global Cancer Surge: Why Deaths Are Rising by 2050 A comprehensive analysis warns that global cancer cases and deaths are set to rise sharply by 2050, driven by population growth, aging, and inequalities. Prevention, equitable care, and improved surveillance are urgent.
Read More Scince News Space a month ago Fomalhaut's Fireworks: Two Massive Collisions Caught Hubble imaged two massive planetesimal collisions around the nearby star Fomalhaut, producing bright dust clouds that mimic exoplanets. New data reshape views of planet formation and future exoplanet imaging.
Read More Scince News Space a month ago Hubble Reveals Chaos Inside Giant 'Dracula' Disk in Detail Hubble's visible-light images expose extreme asymmetry and turbulence in IRAS 23077+6707, a record-size protoplanetary disk. New data reveal filaments, potential inflows, and enough material to form multiple giant planets.
Read More Scince News Space a month ago Three Active Galactic Nuclei Caught in a Rare Triple Merger Astronomers confirmed a rare triple-AGN system first spotted by WISE: two close, merging galaxies plus a third active galaxy linked by a tidal gas tail. Multiwavelength follow-up will probe black hole growth and merger dynamics.
Read More Scince News Health a month ago Why Bariatric Surgery Outpaces GLP-1 Drugs by Five Times A large real-world study presented at ASMBS 2025 reports that bariatric surgery delivers roughly five times the two-year weight loss of GLP-1 drugs (semaglutide, tirzepatide), highlighting gaps in adherence, cost, and long-term outcomes.
Read More Scince News Nature a month ago From Food Waste to Farming Gold: New Biotech Uses Now Researchers are transforming food waste—beet pulp, coconut fibers, radish greens—into sustainable crop protectants, peat alternatives, gut-health ingredients, and stable antioxidant powders for industry.
Read More Scince News Space a month ago Inside NASA’s Artemis II Countdown Dress Rehearsal NASA completed a full dress rehearsal for Artemis II at Kennedy Space Center, stopping the countdown at T-minus 30 seconds. The end-to-end test validated launch timelines, crew procedures, and system responses ahead of the planned April 2026 lunar flyby.
Read More Scince News Space a month ago Inflatable Space Habitats: Will They Replace ISS Soon? Inflatable orbital habitats, such as MaxSpace's Thunderbird, promise large usable volume from a single launch as the ISS retires. Learn about designs, timelines, challenges, and prospects for commercial low Earth orbit stations.
Read More Scince News Nature a month ago Amazon Rainforest Shifts to Hypertropical Climate by 2100 New research shows the Amazon is moving toward a 'hypertropical' state: hotter, longer droughts that raise tree death and could flip the forest from carbon sink to carbon source by 2100.
Read More Scince News Health a month ago New Mouse Study Raises Questions About Aspartame Safety A mouse study in Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy reports organ changes after aspartame exposure at permitted doses, prompting calls to reassess safety limits amid ongoing debate over artificial sweeteners and long-term health risks.
Read More Scince News Health a month ago Immune Cells Shed Sugar Layer to Fuel Psoriasis Inflammation New research shows immune cells remove a sugar-rich glycocalyx to enter inflamed skin in psoriasis, revealing a fresh target for therapies that control immune cell migration and chronic inflammation.
Read More Scince News Nature a month ago Wildfire Smoke: Hidden Organic Emissions Increase Risk New global inventory finds wildfires emit 21% more organic compounds than thought, driven by overlooked IVOCs and SVOCs that form fine particles and worsen air quality in pollution hotspots worldwide.
Read More Scince News Nature a month ago Deepest Arctic Gas Hydrate Seep Found Brimming With Life Scientists discovered the Freya gas hydrate mounds in the Greenland Sea — an ultra-deep methane seep at ~3,640 m teeming with tubeworms, amphipods and chemosynthetic life, with implications for Arctic carbon and deep-sea mining.