Read More Scince News Scientific 3 months ago How Ultra-High Heat Forged Earth's Stable Continents New research shows Earth's continents were forged by ultrahigh temperatures that drove uranium and thorium upward, cooling and strengthening the lower crust. Results impact resource exploration and planetary habitability studies.
Read More Scince News Scientific 3 months ago DNA Reveals What Killed Napoleon’s Soldiers in 1812 Ancient DNA from teeth in Vilnius mass graves reveals paratyphoid and louse-borne relapsing fever—not typhus alone—helped decimate Napoleon’s 1812 army. Metagenomics reshapes the medical story of the retreat.
Read More Scince News Scientific 3 months ago Quantum Teleportation Achieved Over Live Internet Fiber Researchers teleported a quantum state of light through over 30 km of live fiber carrying 400 Gbps of internet traffic — a practical step toward a quantum internet that can share existing fiber infrastructure.
Read More Scince News Scientific 3 months ago Ionocaloric Cooling: A Greener Way to Make Cold, Explained Ionocaloric cooling uses ion movement to trigger phase changes and absorb heat, offering an efficient, low-GWP alternative to HFC refrigerants. Labs report large temperature shifts with small voltages and ongoing work aims to scale the technology.
Read More Scince News Scientific 3 months ago Tiny Chip Laser Could Transform Lidar and Gas Detection A new chip-scale laser developed by NTNU, EPFL and industry partners delivers tunable, stable, and cost-effective light sources for Lidar and gas sensing, promising compact, mass-producible photonics.
Read More Scince News Scientific 3 months ago How an Ancient Fossil Rewrote Freshwater Fish Hearing A 67-million-year-old fossil reveals that sensitive hearing in freshwater fish evolved after multiple migrations from the sea. CT scans, genomic data and vibration models revise otophysan origins and biodiversity drivers.
Read More Scince News Scientific 3 months ago How a Solar-Powered Retinal Chip Is Restoring Sight A photovoltaic retinal implant is giving people with dry age-related macular degeneration partial central vision back. Learn how the PRIMA System works, patient stories, and clinical implications.
Read More Scince News Scientific 3 months ago What Keeps Spaghetti Intact? The Science of Gluten Lund University researchers used neutron scattering and X-rays to show that gluten stabilizes spaghetti during cooking and that salt in the water affects microstructure — findings that guide better gluten-free pasta design.
Read More Scince News Scientific 3 months ago Poisoned AI: Hidden Data Attacks Threaten Global Trust Small injections of malicious data can secretly corrupt large language models, creating backdoors, spreading misinformation, and raising new cybersecurity risks. Learn how poisoning works and what can be done.
Read More Scince News Nature Scientific 3 months ago Glowing Sugars Reveal How Ocean Microbes Store Carbon A novel fluorescent glycan probe lights up when marine sugars are digested, revealing which microbes consume complex polysaccharides and how that controls carbon storage and export in the ocean.
Read More Scince News Scientific 4 months ago Meet Khankhuuluu: The Dragon Prince of Tyrannosaurs Scientists describe Khankhuuluu, a newly identified dinosaur from Mongolia, as the closest-known ancestor of Tyrannosaurs. The discovery sheds light on size evolution, migration between Asia and North America, and the rise of apex predators.
Read More Scince News Scientific 4 months ago Could Your Digital Twin Monitor and Treat Your Mind? Digital cognitive twins—AI-driven virtual replicas of a person’s cognitive and physiological profile—use wearable and behavioural data to predict, monitor and personalise mental health care, promising earlier interventions and tailored treatments.
Read More Scince News Scientific 4 months ago The 900°C Furnace That Forged Earth's Stable Continents New research shows Earth’s continents were forged at temperatures above 900°C. Ultra-high heat drove uranium and thorium upward, cooling and strengthening the lower crust and concentrating critical minerals.
Read More Scince News Scientific 4 months ago Tiny Sound-Guided Microrobots: Swarm, Adapt, and Heal Penn State researchers modeled microrobots that use sound to coordinate swarms that adapt, reassemble, and self-heal. Acoustic communication could enable microrobotics for medicine and cleanup.
Read More Scince News Scientific 4 months ago Mini Human Livers Predict Who Will Suffer Drug Injury A Cincinnati Children’s and Roche collaboration created a patient-specific liver organoid microarray that reproduces immune-driven drug liver injury, offering a scalable path to predict rare, genetics-linked toxicities before clinical use.
Read More Scince News Scientific 4 months ago Atomic Clock for Fossils: Dinosaur Eggs Dated to 85 Ma Scientists applied carbonate U–Pb dating to dinosaur eggs from Qinglongshan, China, producing the first direct age for egg fossils (~85 Ma). The method acts as an "atomic clock" for eggshell carbonates and refines Late Cretaceous timelines.
Read More Scince News Scientific 4 months ago Water Behaves as Solid and Liquid Under Confinement Researchers observed a premelting state where water confined in 1.6 nm nanopores behaves like a solid and a liquid at once, using heavy water and deuterium NMR to reveal layered molecular dynamics.
Read More Scince News Scientific 4 months ago High-Speed Sensors Reveal How Pianists Shape Timbre High-speed, non-contact sensors have proven that pianists can alter a piano's timbre through precise fingertip movements. The study links specific key-motion features to perceived tonal color, with implications for pedagogy and technology.
Read More Scince News Scientific 4 months ago Nobel Prize 2025: The Rise of Porous Crystal Frameworks The 2025 Nobel Prize in Chemistry recognizes Susumu Kitagawa, Richard Robson and Omar Yaghi for creating metal-organic frameworks—porous crystalline materials that trap gases and small molecules with broad applications in energy, environment and medicine.
Read More Scince News Scientific 4 months ago 242-Million-Year-Old Fossil Rewrites Lepidosaur Evolution A 242-million-year-old reptile fossil from Devon reveals unexpected skull and tooth traits, showing that early lepidosaur features evolved piecemeal. High-resolution synchrotron scans enabled the discovery.