Sciworthy Newsletter

“The Fall Equinox, From microbes to Mars, Exoplanets with extreme seasons might be more habitable.”

Views expressed in this science, space, and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.  Accessed on 10 September 2025, 2028 UTC.

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Welcome to the Sciworthy newsletter! September is often referred to as the “season of change.” In the northern hemisphere, the end of September marks the beginning of fall, when leaves begin to turn, days shorten, and ecosystems respond. From microbes preparing for winter to orbital effects on exoplanet habitability, this month we’re highlighting seasonal transformations in nature!
The Fall Equinox
On September 22, Earth will experience 12 hours of daylight and 12 hours of night. In the northern hemisphere, this event marks the official beginning of the autumn season: the fall or autumnal equinox. This event, along with all other seasonal transitions, occurs because Earth has a tilted axis of rotation, shown in red in the image below.

During the year, the Sun appears to move along a path in the sky known as the ecliptic. The Earth’s equator, or its sky equivalent called the celestial equator, is offset from the ecliptic by 23.5°. This means that for 6 months, either the northern or southern hemisphere faces towards the Sun while the other hemisphere faces away from it, then they switch for 6 months. The equinoxes mark the times when Earth’s orientation switches.

One way we know the Earth is round is that objects of the same height at different distances north or south of the equator will cast shadows of different lengths at noon on the equinox. And the angles of each shadow will be exactly equal to the latitude of the objects casting them!

Meet the Team

Maria Calderon-Marrero is a senior at Cornell University majoring in Biology with a concentration in Microbiology and minoring in Earth and Atmospheric Sciences. As a Ronald E. McNair Scholar, she is preparing for a Ph.D. in microbial astrobiology, with a focus on how life might survive, and leave traces, on planets like Mars or ocean worlds such as Europa.

She conducts research in the Muñoz-Saez Group at Cornell University, studying microbes in the silica-rich hot springs of El Tatio, Chile, an environment that closely resembles ancient Mars. Her work investigates how biosignatures are preserved in extreme conditions to help guide future space missions. She has also contributed to research on Antarctic extremophiles and lipid biomarkers in Mars analog environments.

Maria is passionate about making science engaging and inclusive. She hopes to use astrobiology to spark curiosity and inspire students from all backgrounds, especially those historically underrepresented in STEM. Outside the lab, she enjoys nature, crafting, and exploring sci-fi and fantasy worlds through books, video games, and shows.

Maria is joining us from the Blue Marble Space Institute of Science‘s Young Scientist Program. She is developing a project with Sciworthy to communicate astrobiology through videos.

Read Maria’s article about how hot spring rocks could help find life on Mars here.
From Microbes to Mars and Beyond

How do microbes prepare for winter? As the Earth continues its journey around the Sun, the animals and plants of the northern hemisphere are preparing for the coming winter. Humans rely on calendars to keep track of the seasons, while other organisms use changes in the weather and the amount of daylight to signal when winter is approaching. But how do microbes prepare for winter? Researchers discovered that when some bacteria sense shorter days, they boost their cell walls with extra fats to survive the freezing temperatures. Read about it here.

Seasonal frost forms on Mars. Water is essential for life, so when researchers want to explore another planet, they first locate its water resources. Astrobiologists are particularly interested in Mars due to its evidence of past water, which could have enabled life. Since the surface of Mars is cold and dry today, they want to know where that past water went. Scientists recently discovered seasonal frost accumulations on Martian volcanoes that formed from water vapor in the atmosphere. Read about it here.

Exoplanet (Illustration) (2019-29-4503-Image) from ESA/Hubble is licensed under CC BY 4.0

Exoplanets with extreme seasons might be more habitable. Earth’s relative distance to the Sun month-to-month doesn’t influence the climate much because its orbit is close to a perfect circle, as described above. But exoplanets with non-circular orbits could experience extreme seasonal changes. Astronomers have shown that these exoplanets with weird orbits could actually be more habitable than planets with circular orbits. Somewhere in the Galaxy, alien microbes could be enjoying a scorching, irradiated summer and a subzero, icy winter. Read about it here.

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Scientific American-Technology

“People want AI to help artists, not be the artist.”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.  Accessed on 09 September 2025, 2039 UTC.

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Russ Roberts (https://hawaiisciencejournal.com).

September 9—This week, a survey shows that people want AI to help artists but not be the artist. Also, images containing hidden messages can hijack AI agents and a breakthrough in fiber optics promises faster internet.

—Deni Ellis Béchard, Senior Reporter, Technology


We surveyed people in the U.S. about artificial-intelligence-generated art. Their answers told us a lot about how we value human creativity

Last week, I wrote about a study that shows how tiny, human‑invisible pixel tweaks in everyday images—wallpapers, ads, PDFs, social posts—could hijack AI agents, making them open websites and download spyware. Though the study’s researchers say that open-source AI models are particularly vulnerable, such attacks have yet to happen in the wild. The team is highlighting the risk now so that by the time AI agents roll out en masse, people will be ready.

In Other AI News

Anthropic has just agreed to pay the priciest library late fee in history: $1.5 billion to end a class action lawsuit from authors who say the company trained its Claude AI model on pirated books. Plaintiffs call it the largest copyright recovery ever; the math pencils out to roughly $3,000 per book for about 500,000 titles, and Anthropic says it will delete the shadow‑library stash as part of the deal. The backdrop here is a June compromise ruling by Judge William Alsup determining that downloading pirated ebooks for training purposes is not legal, but training can use legally purchased copyrighted books under fair use laws since the training is “transformative” and doesn’t replace the books directly. (If a model spits out copyrighted prose, that’s a separate fight.) But the fair‑use dust hasn’t settled, and the Anthropic lawsuit lands in a season of copyright trench warfare: another San Francisco judge, when authors sued Meta, said using copyrighted works without permission to train AI would be unlawful “in many circumstances” even as he offered Meta a pass because the authors failed to prove that Meta had reproduced or shared their copyrighted books unlawfully or caused market harm. Meanwhile, Apple has also come under fire from authors who filed a lawsuit in San Francisco alleging that Apple trained language models on a stash of pirated ebooks.

The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) plans to demand records from Meta and OpenAI as it studies how AI companions affect kids’ mental health and privacy. Regulators have been tightening the screws all year. In April, the FTC limited indefinite retention of children’s data and discussed a formal study on AI companions used by minors. And states have joined the fight: a bipartisan posse of 44 attorneys general warned AI companies to stop predatory interactions with kids. They cite the discovery of Meta rules that, until recently, let AI bots flirt or engage in romantic role‑play with minors. Meta has since said that it is revising policies and has added safeguards for AI interactions with teens. With advocacy groups urging the FTC to scrutinize kid‑targeted AI systems, a Washington consensus is forming: if your chatbot talks like a “friend,” it should be treated like a product for kids—with all the rules and paperwork that implies.

For the latest in tech, follow me on XInstagram and Bluesky @denibechard.

Deni Ellis Béchard, Senior Reporter, Technology

 
Top Stories
The New Frontier of AI Hacking—Could Online Images Hijack Your Computer?

Artificial-intelligence agents—touted as AI’s next wave—could be vulnerable to malicious code hidden in innocent-looking images on your computer screen

New ‘Glass Straw’ Fibers Could Speed Up the Internet

A cable design that sends light through air rather than solid glass could cut signal loss and make long-distance transmissions cheaper

What’s the Plan for ‘Golden Dome’? Even Experts Aren’t Sure

A sweeping U.S. missile defense program comes with many risks, costs and uncertainties, analysts say

If you’re enjoying this newsletter, consider a subscription to Scientific American. Dive deeper into the stories that matter most to you!
 
What We’re Reading
  • Psychological Tricks Can Get AI to Break the Rules. | Wired
  • SpaceX strikes $17B deal to buy EchoStar’s spectrum for Starlink’s direct-to-phone service. | TechCrunch
  • Google admits the open web is in ‘rapid decline.’ | The Verge
 
From the Archive
Engineered Metamaterials Can Trick Light and Sound into Mind-Bending Behavior

Advanced materials can modify waves, creating optical illusions and useful technologies

 

News from Science (AAAS)

“WHO says Africa’s mpox epidemic no longer an international emergency.”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.  Accessed on 09 September 2025, 1447 UTC.

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Science | Google News

“Periodic Graphics:  The science of sleep medications.”

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Science | The Guardian

“Drug to prevent heart attacks is not ‘better than aspirin’ for everyone.”

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For people with lower levels of the enzyme required to metabolise clopidogrel, aspirin remains the better option – a personalised approach is required, write Dr Ronnie Ramlogan , Dr Dimitri Gagliardi , Dr Luigi Venetucci , Dr Abisope Akintola , Dr Cinzia Dello Russo and Prof Sir Munir Pirmohamed Your article ( Doctors find drug that is better than aspirin at preventing heart attacks, 31 August )
Researchers say low- and no-calorie sweeteners appear to affect thinking and memory in middle age Sweeteners found in yoghurts and fizzy drinks can damage people’s ability to think and remember, and appear to cause “long-term harm” to health, research has found. People who consumed the largest amount of sweeteners such as aspartame and saccharin saw a 62% faster decline in their cognitive powers

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Russian leader’s claim that people can ‘get younger’ through repeated organ transplants has raised eyebrows Perhaps it was the extravagant display of deadly weaponry that prompted Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin to mull on mortality at this week’s military parade in Beijing. It was more banter than serious discussion, but with both aged 72, the Chinese president and his Russian counterpart may feel

Sep 5, 2025

The satellite will turn deep red as the Earth passes between the sun and the moon at about 7.30pm on Sunday A rare total lunar eclipse “blood moon” will be visible from the UK on Sunday night for the first time since 2022. The moon is expected to turn a deep, dark red as the Earth passes directly between the sun and the moon, casting its shadow across the lunar surface. Continue reading…
As scientific institutions and truths come under attack in the US, how well protected is Australia against the assault on science and facts? Get our breaking news email , free app or daily news podcast The light afternoon breeze barely ruffled the sails of the Vasa as it glided out of Stockholm harbour for its maiden voyage on 10 August 1628. With its high stern emblazoned by a gilded coat of arm
Russian leader was caught musing about immortality with Xi Jinping but his fascination with long life is nothing new It was the stuff of Bond villains. Two ageing autocrats, their younger ally in tow, ambled down a red-carpeted ramp before a military parade in Beijing when a hot mic picked up a question that seemed to be on their minds: how long could they keep going – and, between the lines, mig
Device could replace deep brain stimulation and may also help with Tourette syndrome, Alzheimer’s and depression An ultrasound “helmet” offers potential new ways for treating neurological conditions without surgery or other invasive procedures, a study has shown. The device can target brain regions 1,000 times smaller than ultrasound can, and could replace existing approaches such as deep brain s

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Shift from fossil fuels could lower deaths from particle pollution in some states by 19% in five years, study finds Efforts to improve the climate could reduce the number of deaths caused by air pollution in the US by about 6,000 people a year by 2030, according to a study . If action is not taken, the situation is predicted to worsen. This is because of a growing and ageing population who are mo
West Australians should get particularly good views, but the eclipse will be visible from the whole country given favourable weather Get our breaking news email , free app or daily news podcast Set your alarm, pray for clear skies and prepare to be awestruck in the early hours of Monday morning, when Australia becomes the prime location to witness a rare total lunar eclipse. A blood moon, as it i
Airborne particles cause toxic clumps of proteins in brain that are hallmarks of Lewy body dementia, study indicates Fine-particulate air pollution can drive devastating forms of dementia by triggering the formation of toxic clumps of protein that destroy nerve cells as they spread through the brain, research suggests. Exposure to the airborne particles causes proteins in the brain to misfold int
Jean Innes says it is time for ‘new chapter’ at AI research body, after staff revolt and government calls for change The chief executive of the UK’s leading artificial intelligence institute is stepping down after a staff revolt and government calls for a strategic overhaul. Jean Innes has led the Alan Turing Institute since 2023, but her position has come under pressure amid widespread disconten
British founder of Quantinuum doubles value of stake with excitement growing over technology’s ‘transformative potential’ A British quantum computing entrepreneur has doubled the value of his stake in the business he founded to $2bn (£1.5bn), after the company achieved a $10bn valuation in its latest fundraising. Ilyas Khan, 63, is the founder of Quantinuum, a UK-US firm that announced on Thursda

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Psychologists have traditionally believed we become less curious as we age, but recent research has shown that curiosity actually becomes more targeted and specific in our later years. To find out why this happens, and how maintaining broad curiosity into older age can help keep our brains young, Madeleine Finlay hears from Dr Mary Whatley, an assistant professor of psychology at Western Carolina
Study finds scrollers are more prone to piles than those who go to the lavatory without phones People who take a mobile phone to the loo should keep to a two TikTok limit, according to doctors who found that toilet scrollers are more prone to haemorrhoids than phoneless lavatory-goers. Those who sit on the throne with a phone spend far more time on the toilet than others, with longer stints linke
Review says ministers have only ‘small chance’ of wiping out bovine tuberculosis by 2038 without more investment Labour can end the badger cull but only with a Covid-19 style focus on testing and vaccinating, the author of a government-commissioned report has said. Ministerial plans to stop the shooting of the animals can be achieved but at a cost to the Treasury, the report warns. Continue readi
Director general of Cern in the 1980s who went on to establish the Sesame laboratory in Jordan The German physicist Herwig Schopper, who has died aged 101, was director general of Cern, the European Organisation for Nuclear Research, from 1981 to 1988, overseeing the laboratory’s first Nobel prize-winning discovery and paving the way to another. It was thanks to Herwig’s tenacity that the laborat

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When things are grim, the promises made by the wellness industry sound very appealing. I worry about how vulnerable this has made me Ordinarily, I’m a sensible person – at least part-time. A journalist, an asker of questions, a checker of sources. Historically, a big fan of research. But three years into a debilitating chronic illness, I am willing to try anything to get well. Even things that wo
President says national security operations in space will be based in state he won comfortably, reversing Biden decision Donald Trump made his first public appearance in a week on Tuesday to announce that the US Space Command (Spacecom) headquarters, which is tasked with leading national security operations in space, would be in the Republican stronghold of Alabama. Flanked by Republican senators
The unprecedented find has shifted archaeological understanding about the first civilisations in the Americas Archaeologists in Peru have discovered a multicoloured three-dimensional wall that could date back 4,000 years, in an unprecedented find that has shifted archaeological understanding about the first civilisations in the Americas. The centrepiece of the three-by-six metre wall carving is a
Sighting by James Webb space telescope of black hole with sparse halo of material could upend theories of the universe An ancient and “nearly naked” black hole that astronomers believe may have been created in the first fraction of a second after the big bang has been spotted by the James Webb space telescope. If confirmed as a so-called primordial black hole, a theoretical class of object predic

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Trial in only continent untouched by avian flu suggests jabs will be key to survival as migration season approaches It is easy to imagine how it could happen. A petrel, flying east from the Indian Ocean at the end of the Austral winter, makes landfall at New Zealand’s southern Codfish Island/Whenua Hou. Tired from its long journey, the petrel seeks refuge in the burrow of a green kākāpō : a criti
It’s been a dramatic week at the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). In the space of seven days, the agency’s head was sacked and replaced by an interim head, four senior staff members resigned, and existing staff took to the streets to express support for their ousted leaders. To understand how everything unfolded and what it could mean for the health of Americans, science edito
Test detects memory problems linked to Alzheimer’s long before typical diagnosis, raising possibility of earlier drug intervention A three-minute brainwave test can detect memory problems linked to Alzheimer’s disease long before people are typically diagnosed, raising hopes that the approach could help identify those most likely to benefit from new drugs for the condition. In a small trial, the
Experts ‘extremely concerned’ about e-cigarette use and say millions of young people could face ill health in future Doctors have raised the alarm about high levels of vaping among children worldwide, saying they are “convinced” e-cigarettes are causing “irreversible” harm to their health. Cardiologists, researchers and health experts said they were “extremely concerned” about the harmful effects
The solutions to today’s partisan problems Earlier today I set three gerrymandering logic puzzles. Here they are again with solutions. In each of the grids below, the challenge is to find the unique electoral map in which the minority colour wins the most regions. A region is defined as a contiguous block of cells that are joined either horizontally or vertically. (A region cannot contain any cel
Bluesky posts referencing scholarly articles ‘find substantially higher levels of interaction’ than on Elon Musk’s platform Bluesky’s growing status as the social media platform of choice for the world’s scientists

 

Discover Magazine-The Sciences

“Don’t miss September’s Blood Moon-A total lunar eclipse that turns red instead of black.”

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News from Science (AAAS)

“U.S. will fulfill Biden-era pledge to provide HIV prevention break through to millions.”

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Smithsonian Magazine-the Daily

“The tiny New York town where mediums connect with the dead.”

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Visitors participate in a Forest Temple service in the spiritualist community of Lily Dale, about an hour southwest of Buffalo. (Stefani Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images)

The Tiny New York Town Where Mediums Give Voice to the Dead

Lily Dale is home to about 40 mediums who connect thousands of spiritual seekers with their deceased loved ones
Erin Donaghue
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