2025-10-20 09:06:26 +00:00 Scientists have discovered that Earth’s magnetosphere is charged opposite to what was once believed. The area of space influenced by Earth’s magnetic field is called the magnetosphere. Within this protective bubble, scientists have observed an electric force that moves from the morning side of the planet toward the evening side. This vast electric field plays […] Read more…
2025-10-20 08:41:55 +00:00 Astronomers have identified the universe’s lowest-mass dark object by observing its faint gravitational distortion of light. The hidden mass, roughly a million times the weight of the Sun, may be either a dense knot of dark matter or a tiny, inactive galaxy. The discovery supports existing dark matter theories and proves that current technology can […] Read more…
2025-10-20 08:16:22 +00:00 Scientists have found that on Titan, substances that should remain separate can actually combine under freezing conditions. NASA and Chalmers University researchers discovered that hydrogen cyanide can form stable crystals with methane and ethane, overturning a basic rule of chemistry. The finding offers new clues about how life’s essential molecules may have arisen in harsh, […] Read more…
2025-10-19 22:55:32 +00:00 USC engineers have demonstrated a new kind of optical device that lets light organize its own route using the principles of thermodynamics. Instead of relying on switches or digital control, the light finds its own path through the system. This approach could transform data transmission, computing, and communications by making optical technologies more natural and […] Read more…
2025-10-19 22:30:29 +00:00 A new laboratory earthquake model connects real contact area with earthquake dynamics, paving the way for improved prediction and early warning systems. Scientists have created a new laboratory model that links the tiny, real contact areas between fault surfaces to the likelihood of earthquakes. Detailed in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the […] Read more…
2025-10-19 22:05:21 +00:00 Most comprehensive study of the temple complex and its surrounding land and water scapes identifies the earliest period of occupation and points to a possible connection with a creation myth. An international team of researchers led by Uppsala University has completed the most extensive geoarchaeological investigation of Egypt’s Karnak Temple complex to date. Situated within […] Read more…
2025-10-19 18:15:22 +00:00 New research unveils 14 previously unknown marine species, offering fresh insight into life hidden in the ocean’s depths. Earth’s oceans still hold an immense number of undiscovered organisms, with only a small portion of the estimated two million marine species formally identified and described. One major obstacle is the long delay, sometimes lasting decades, between […] Read more…
2025-10-19 17:50:24 +00:00 After nearly 25 years of investigation, scientists have solved the mystery. Europe’s largest bat not only eats small birds, it hunts and catches them more than a kilometer above the ground—and consumes them while still in flight. An international group of scientists has uncovered how Europe’s largest bat species hunts and eats small birds. Their […] Read more…
2025-10-19 17:25:28 +00:00 A little-known microbe in your gut produces methane and may help your body extract more calories from food, according to a study led by Arizona State University. Deep inside your gut lives a vast community of microbes, and among them is one unusual resident that produces methane. This lesser-known methane-producing microbe may influence how efficiently […] Read more…
2025-10-19 14:09:11 +00:00 Overdose deaths among adults 65 and older from fentanyl mixed with stimulants have surged 9,000%, revealing a growing threat to seniors. Experts warn that age, medications, and health conditions make this group especially at risk. Overdose deaths among people 65 and older linked to fentanyl mixed with stimulants such as cocaine and methamphetamines have skyrocketed […] Read more…
2025-10-19 13:44:09 +00:00 Scientists at UC Irvine have found a way to restore vision in aging eyes by targeting how the body processes certain fats. Building on earlier research into the ELOVL2 “aging gene,” the team showed that giving older mice specific fatty acids improved their eyesight, even reversing signs of aging in the eye. Reversing Age-Related Vision […] Read more…
2025-10-19 13:19:25 +00:00 Scientists in Japan have developed enhanced versions of vitamin K that could help the brain repair itself by generating new neurons. These redesigned molecules, created by combining vitamin K with retinoic acid, showed three times the ability to turn stem cells into neurons compared with natural vitamin K. Neuronal Loss and the Search for Regeneration […] Read more…
2025-10-19 04:32:57 +00:00 Japanese scientists simulated faint 21-centimeter radio waves from the Universe’s “Dark Ages,” offering a potential way to detect dark matter. About 13.8 billion years ago, the Universe emerged in a sudden burst of expansion known as the Big Bang. Roughly 400,000 years after this event, it entered a long, lightless stretch called the “Dark Ages.” […] Read more…
2025-10-19 04:07:44 +00:00 Blocks of frozen carbon dioxide sliding down Martian dunes may have carved the planet’s strange gullies, mimicking the work of living creatures. In lab experiments, scientists recreated this process, showing how sublimating CO2 ice can blast and burrow through sand, forming deep trenches that match those seen on Mars. The findings reveal a powerful geological […] Read more…
2025-10-19 03:42:14 +00:00 Scientists reexamining data from NASA’s Cassini spacecraft have uncovered exciting new evidence from Saturn’s icy moon Enceladus. The spacecraft detected complex organic molecules being blasted into space from powerful jets near the moon’s south pole, hinting at active chemical processes deep within its hidden ocean. Some of these reactions may form the early building blocks […] Read more…
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