Read More Scince News Scientific 3 months ago Magnons Create Voltage: Path to Ultrafast Low‑Power Chips University of Delaware researchers show that magnons—spin waves in antiferromagnets—can generate measurable electric polarization, opening a route to ultrafast, low-power chips that use magnetic signals instead of moving charge.
Read More Scince News Scientific 3 months ago From Trash to Tap: Sun-Powered Catalyst Cleans Water Nagoya Institute of Technology researchers converted polypropylene waste and molybdenum oxide into a solar-driven composite that degrades pollutants, adsorbs heavy metals, and powers fast photothermal desalination.
Read More Scince News General info Scientific 3 months ago Neanderthals Among Us: New Evidence of Shared Heritage Archaeological and genetic studies reveal three waves of Homo sapiens migration into Europe and recast Neanderthals as adaptable relatives whose tools, art and DNA helped shape modern humans.
Read More Scince News General info Scientific 3 months ago AI Facial Scans: Could They Decide Your Job and Pay? University of Pennsylvania research suggests AI can infer personality traits from face photos and predict job outcomes. The findings raise ethical questions about hiring, lending and algorithmic bias.
Read More Scince News Scientific 3 months ago Maximum Agreement Predictor Improves Prediction Match Lehigh researchers introduce MALP, a predictor that maximizes concordance between predicted and actual values. Learn how MALP improves agreement across devices and datasets like OCT eye scans and body fat estimates.
Read More Scince News Scientific 3 months ago Ancient Tools in Kenya: 2.75 Million Years of Innovation Excavations at Kenya’s Namorotukunan site reveal a 2.75–2.44 million-year-old record of Oldowan stone tools, showing remarkable technological continuity and resilience amid dramatic climate shifts in the Turkana Basin.
Read More Scince News Scientific 3 months ago How Engineers Brought Octopus Camouflage to Bacteria UC San Diego researchers engineered bacteria to produce xanthommatin, a rare cephalopod pigment, using growth-coupled biosynthesis. The method boosts yields dramatically and opens doors for camouflage research and sustainable biomanufacturing.
Read More Scince News Scientific 3 months ago Topological Insulators Unlock Hidden Terahertz Light Scientists used topological insulators and split-ring resonators to generate both even and odd terahertz harmonics, paving the way for compact, tunable THz sources for communications, imaging, and quantum tech.
Read More Scince News Scientific 3 months ago From Tooth Pulp to Brain Repair: Dental Stem Cells as Neurons Researchers are converting stem cells from discarded tooth pulp into neuron-like cells that produce GABA and show promise in animal models of Alzheimer's. Dental stem cells offer a minimally invasive, ethical source for regenerative neurological therapies.
Read More Scince News Scientific 3 months ago Ancient Neighbors: Early Homo Lived with Australopithecus New Ledi-Geraru fossils from Ethiopia show early Homo and Australopithecus lived side by side 2.6–2.8 million years ago, reshaping views of human evolution and hominin coexistence in the Afar Region.
Read More Scince News Nature Scientific 3 months ago 18th-Century Mechanical Vesuvius Rebuilt After 250 Years An 18th-century mechanical model of Mount Vesuvius, first sketched by Sir William Hamilton in 1775, has been recreated by University of Melbourne engineering students using modern materials, LEDs and microcontrollers. The working model is now exhibited until June 28, 2026.
Read More Scince News General info Scientific 3 months ago Fuel-Free Microwave Plasma Engine Could Revolutionize Flight Chinese engineers have developed a microwave-driven plasma engine that uses compressed air and microwaves to create thrust without fossil fuels. Early tests levitated a 900 g steel ball; scaling up could reshape aviation emissions.
Read More Scince News Scientific 3 months ago Arizona's Giant Solar Park: Power for 70,000 Homes Arizona approved the 2,000-hectare Pinyon Solar Project, combining PV panels and a 24-hectare battery system to power ~70,000 homes, boost grid resilience, create jobs, and generate over $100M in tax revenue.
Read More Scince News Scientific 3 months ago Why Pumpkins Soak Up Pollution: The Protein Signal Japanese researchers discovered a tiny protein change that explains why pumpkins and other gourds concentrate soil pollutants. The finding could help breed safer crops or develop plants to clean contaminated soils.
Read More Scince News General info Scientific 3 months ago Why Smarter AI May Be More Selfish — New Study Warns Carnegie Mellon researchers find that LLMs with explicit reasoning often act more selfishly, reducing cooperation in social-dilemma games. The study warns that smarter AI could undermine collective outcomes.
Read More Scince News Scientific 3 months ago Germanium Turns Superconductor: A Foundry-Ready Breakthrough Researchers used molecular beam epitaxy to embed gallium into germanium’s crystal lattice, creating a wafer-scale superconducting germanium (super-Ge) that conducts electricity with zero resistance at 3.5 K.
Read More Scince News Nature Scientific 3 months ago MXenes Could Unlock Cleaner Ammonia and Renewables Now MXenes—tunable two-dimensional carbides and nitrides—show promise as electrocatalysts for cleaner ammonia production. Combining computation and Raman spectroscopy, researchers map atomic mechanisms that could decarbonize fertilizer and fuel.
Read More Scince News Scientific 3 months ago Optical Chip Breaks 10 GHz Barrier for Real-Time AI Tsinghua researchers present OFE2, an integrated optical chip that performs feature extraction at 12.5 GHz with sub-250 ps latency, enabling low-energy, real-time AI for imaging, healthcare, and high-frequency trading.
Read More Scince News Scientific 3 months ago Shiitake Memristors: Fungi That Remember and Compute Scientists demonstrated that dried shiitake mycelium can act as memristors — memory-resistive elements — offering a promising route to low-cost, biodegradable, neuromorphic hardware built from fungi.
Read More Scince News Scientific 3 months ago How a 'Childlike Face' Can Unlock Lost Childhood Memories New research shows that embodying a childlike version of your own face can help adults retrieve richer childhood memories. The study links bodily self-perception to autobiographical memory and suggests new research and therapeutic directions.