Today's Science News

May 13, 2024

Lego rolls out details about Apollo lunar rover model coming in August - Lego is gearing up to deliver a detailed model of the original "rock and rolling ride," the electric buggy driven by NASA's last three Apollo crews to explore the moon.

What Are Nanoplastics? An Engineer Has Concerns About Particles Too Small To See - "Nanoplastics are attracting growing concern thanks to recent technological advances that have made researchers more able to detect and analyze them."

DAILY DOSE: Rick Slayman Dies, First to Receive Pig Kidney; New Antibiotic Emblaveo Approved to Combat Superbugs. - RICK SLAYMAN PASSES TWO MONTHS AFTER PIG TRANSPLANT.

These Rocks Formed in an Ancient Lake on Mars - We already know that water has existed on the surface of Mars but for how long?

What a Weekend! Spectacular Aurora Photos from Around the World - “A dream come true.”“I never expected this!”“The most amazing light show I’ve ever seen in my life!”“Once in a lifetime!”“No doubt, this weekend will be remembered as ‘that weekend.’” That’s how people described their views of the Aurora borealis this weekend, which put on a breathtaking celestial show around the world, and at lower latitudes … Continue reading "What a Weekend!

The First Turtle Organoids - Herpetology meets hepatology as scientists develop new tools for exploring how turtles survive freezing, oxygen-poor environments.

Earth may have had freshwater and continents just 200 million years after forming, ancient crystals reveal - Ancient zircon crystals hold chemical clues that of freshwater may have existed on Earth soon after it formed.

New algorithm slashes time to run most sophisticated climate models by 10-fold - Climate models can be a million lines of code long and can take months to run on supercomputers.

Cat Whiskers Help Them Navigate and Can Tell Us How a Cat's Feeling - Cat whiskers are cute, but they're also essential to the wellbeing of your furry friend.

How to Check If You Have Immunity to Measles or Need Another Dose - Certain adults may need to get an additional dose of the measles vaccine.

Americans Are Lonelier than Europeans in Middle Age - The lack of a safety net in the U.S. is a big factor that explains why Americans feel lonelier than Danes or Swedes

15 Years Ago: STS-125, the Final Hubble Servicing Mission -  “Trying to do stellar observations from Earth is like trying to do birdwatching from the bottom of a lake.” James B. Odom, Hubble Program Manager 1983-1990.

China creates its largest ever quantum computing chip — and it could be key to building the nation's own 'quantum cloud' - China’s supersized superconducting chip looks to match the performance of industry leaders like IBM and will be used to help scale up the performance of quantum computers globally.

The surface of this volcanic exoplanet is hotter than some stars - Described as being like "Io on steroids," a newly discovered exoplanet is the victim of a tug of war between its neighboring planets and its star.

Stunning image shows atoms transforming into quantum waves — just as Schrödinger predicted - A new imaging technique, which captured frozen lithium atoms transforming into quantum waves, could be used to probe some of the most poorly understood aspects of the quantum world.

Inside the Wild Ways Many Creatures Make Milk - Mammals aren’t the only animals that provide nutritious secretions for their young

Meeting Developmental Milestones Early Doesn’t Always Predict Success - Developmental milestones help us understand when a child needs help, but meeting them early doesn’t necessarily predict long term success

Nuclear Weapons at Any Price? Congress Should Say No - Costs are skyrocketing to modernize the U.S. nuclear arsenal.

To limit pollution, new recipe makes plastic a treat for microbes - Microplastics made from fossil fuels take centuries to disappear.

Scientists Say: Correlation and Causation - There is a correlation between countries where people eat more chocolate and those that produce more Nobel Prize winners.

MIT gives AI the power to 'reason like humans' by creating hybrid architecture - MIT scientists devise three abstraction libraries that can be combined with AI systems to improve their reasoning and contextual awareness in programming, strategic planning and robotics.

How a giant sunspot unleashed solar storms that spawned global auroras that just dazzled us all - Intense solar activity generated the most extreme geomagnetic storm since 2003 on Friday (May 10), and the action could continue into this week.

The Internet Is Full of Deepfakes, and the Sky Is Full of Trash - Deepfake images, a delayed spaceflight, the troubles with space junk and a blast from our past for your Monday review of science news.

A novel flame-retardant, smoke-suppressing and superhydrophobic transparent bamboo for future glasses - Professors Yiqiang Wu and Caichao Wan, along with their team from Central South University of Forestry and Technology (CSUFT), have pioneered a transparent material derived from natural bamboo.

RabbitAir A3 air purifier review - Does the eye-catching RabbitAir A3 air purifier live up to its premium price?

Why do earthquakes happen far away from plate boundaries? - It's well known that earthquakes can rock fault-filled places like the U.S. West Coast.

Tromelin Island’s Impressive Comeback - The last rat on Tromelin Island—a small teardrop of scrubby sand in the western Indian Ocean near Madagascar—was killed in 2005.

Earth from space: Majestic 'yin-yang' crater sits atop a dormant volcano in Turkey - The massive caldera of Turkey's Mount Nemrut volcano is split in half, with one side made of solidified lava flows and the other half a deep crater lake.

Marsh on the Move - In Georgia, researchers are testing the meddle of the marsh and beginning to track its shifts.

Photographing the Epic Geology of the Keweenaw Peninsula - Photographer Michael George travels to the remote Keweenaw Peninsula to photograph the region's epic geology, including glowing rocks.

How Can You Stop a Disease-Carrying Mosquito? - An effort to slow the spread of deadly avian malaria is giving Hawaiian forest birds a fighting chance.

27 new wild swimming sites for England - but are they clean? - Twenty-seven new sites have been designated for summer pollution monitoring.

May 12, 2024

New protein source passes the taste test in Qld - A meat based protein powder tested at Beef24 this week in Rockhampton, Queensland, has surprised delegates, according to one of the human taste-testers.

SpaceX Shows Off Its New Extravehicular Activity Suit - In February 2022, SpaceX and entrepreneur/philanthropist Jared Isaacman (commander of the Inspiration4 mission) announced they were launching a new program to “rapidly advance human spaceflight capabilities” while supporting important charitable and humanitarian causes here on Earth.

Do Clashing Galaxies Create Odd Radio Circles? - Within the last five years, astronomers have discovered a new type of astronomical phenomenon that exists on vast scales – larger than whole galaxies.

SpaceX launches 23 Starlink satellites from Florida (video) - SpaceX launched 23 of its Starlink satellites from Florida on Sunday (May 12), adding to its huge and ever-growing broadband megaconstellation.

You might have missed: infanticide in parrotlets; Mustafar-like exoplanet; elephants say hi; alopecia - You might have missed: infanticide and adoption common in parrotlets; Mustafar-like volcanic exoplanet; how elephants say hello; and alopecia treatment.

Scientists could make blazing-fast 6G using curving light rays - Researchers have discovered a way to curve data-carrying terahertz signals around obstacles, paving the way for ultrafast 6G.

James Webb telescope detects 1-of-a-kind atmosphere around 'Hell Planet' in distant star system - Using the James Webb Space Telescope, scientists have discovered evidence of a carbon-rich atmosphere around the hellish world 55 Cancri e. This marks the best evidence yet of an atmosphere around a rocky exoplanet.

JWST finds best evidence yet for rocky exoplanet atmosphere - NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has detected the best evidence to date for the existence of an atmosphere around a rocky exoplanet.

Massive study of 8,000 cats reveals which breeds live longest - Birman and Burmese cats live the longest, while Sphynx cats die the youngest, a giant new study of U.K. cats found.

Giant 'rogue waves' of invisible matter might be disrupting the orbits of stars, new study hints - New research shows how disruptions to binary star systems could be the key to detecting space's most confounding substance — dark matter.

In the race for space metals, companies hope to cash in - Mining asteroids could reduce the burden on Earth’s resources.

32 strange places scientists are looking for aliens - From planets and moons in our solar system to dying stars and parallel universes, here are some of the far-out places scientists are searching for alien life.

Doctors Must Help Patients Avoid Deadly Heat Fueled by Climate Change, CDC Urges - New CDC guidance encourages clinicians to start conversations with patients about dangerous heat

Monster galactic outflow powered by exploding stars - Star death and birth both contribute to driving material out of a galaxy.

'Extreme' solar storms cook up sweet Mother's Day auroras for Moms everywhere - Want to save all the calories from Mother's Day brunch?

Use AI to correct race, culture bias in AI suggests expert - Prominent AI applications are showing racial biases and a lack of diversity and cultural sensitivity.

Hope for rare mountain chicken frog thanks to London-bred froglets - Frantic efforts are being made to save the endangered mountain chicken frog, native to just two Caribbean islands.

May 11, 2024

The man who took on the coal industry to save a forest - and won - Alok Shukla has spent years fighting to protect a key Indian forest from mining companies.

Study first to show that climate conditions could initiate some earthquakes - By Jennifer Chu  MIT News When scientists look for an earthquake’s cause, their search often starts underground.

The stormy sun erupts with its biggest solar flare yet from a massive sunspot — and it's still crackling (video) - Just when we think we’ve seen the most powerful of flares from a colossal sunspot, the sun unleashed kicked off the strongest eruption of the weekend yet and is still crackling with solar storms.

Study highlights need for improvement of patient safety in outpatient settings - Over the last several decades, research has brought nationwide awareness to issues of patient harm in the “inpatient” setting, where patients receive care as part of an overnight stay at a hospital.

Supermassive Black Holes Got Started From Massive Cosmic Seeds - One longstanding mystery in astronomy is how supermassive black holes got so heavy so early.

A fragment of human brain, mapped - Harvard and Google researchers achieved a groundbreaking 3D reconstruction of a human brain fragment with AI.

New origami robot crawls like a caterpillar - Combining the ancient art of paper folding with modern materials, researchers have created a new caterpillar-like soft robot which bends and twists through mazes.

NOAA says “extreme” solar storm will persist through the weekend - So far disruptions from the geomagnetic storm appear to be manageable.

Houston, we have an encore: ISS virtual reality experience 'The Infinite' returns - What do you do for an encore after you have virtually transported thousands of Houstonians to the International Space Station?

Future Pandemics Will Have The Same Human Causes As Ancient Outbreaks - The changes that came with the transition from foraging to farming paved the way for disease

Worker rights are one of the least protected human rights - A new report has found that worker rights – including the right to form a trade union and the right to bargain collectively – are among the least protected human rights globally.

Northern Lights stun UK in spectacular display - A rare solar storm made the aurora borealis visible across the UK, including across the south.

Is dark matter’s main rival theory dead? - There’s bad news from the Cassini spacecraft and other recent tests.

AI Therapy Bots Have Risks and Benefits and More Risks - Therapy chatbots are increasingly popular and may benefit some people, but it's dangerous to trust AI during a mental health crisis

Quantum breakthrough: World’s purest silicon brings scientists one step closer to scaling up quantum computers - More than 100 years ago, scientists at The University of Manchester changed the world when they discovered the nucleus in atoms, marking the birth of nuclear physics.

How the Moon got a makeover - The Moon's former surface sank to the depths, until volcanism brought it back.

Dogma-challenging telomere findings may offer new insights for cancer treatments - A new study led by University of Pittsburgh and UPMC Hillman Cancer Center researchers shows that an enzyme called PARP1 is involved in repair of telomeres, the lengths of DNA that protect the tips of chromosomes, and that impairing this process can lead to telomere shortening and genomic instability that can cause cancer.

Longevity for heart failure patients improves with COVID jabs - A big Korean analysis of people with heart failure has revealed substantial positive impacts of getting vaccinated against COVID-19.

Rock art of boats and cattle found in the middle of Sudanese desert - A pair of archaeologists have uncovered a strange series of rock art carvings that show boats and cattle – both vitally in need of water to work properly – in

Why getting in touch with our ‘gerbil brain’ could help machines listen better - Macquarie University researchers have debunked a 75-year-old theory about how humans determine where sounds are coming from, and it could unlock the secret to creating a next generation of more adaptable and efficient hearing devices ranging from hearing aids to smartphones.

A triumph of galaxies in three new images from the VST - Distant, far away galaxies.

Expert reaction: AstraZeneca withdraws its COVID-19 vaccine - AstraZeneca developed the first vaccine for COVID-19, beating the competition, but this week they’ve announced they’re withdrawing the jab worldwide following a drop in demand.

Island fights back grey squirrel invasion - A conservationist is on a mission to keep a Welsh island a sanctuary for native red squirrels.

NASA wants a cheaper Mars Sample Return—Boeing proposes most expensive rocket - "To reduce mission complexity, this new concept is doing one launch."

May 10, 2024

If You’ve Never Seen An Aurora Before, This Might Be Your Chance! - Tonight and the rest of the weekend could be your best chance ever to see the aurora.

How Do People Get Parasitic Brain Worms like the One RFK, Jr., Had? - Experts explain how certain worms can infect the brain and why they are an important global public health problem

Small pump for kids awaiting heart transplant shows promise in Stanford Medicine-led trial - A small, implantable cardiac pump that could help children await heart transplants at home, not in the hospital, has performed well in the first stage of human testing.

More children gain hearing as gene therapy for profound deafness advances - The therapy treats a rare type of deafness, but experts hope it's a "jumping point."

Lighting Up the Moon’s Permanently Shadowed Craters - The Moon’s polar regions are home to permanently shadowed craters.

NASA Invites Media to Expedition 70 Crew Visit at Marshall - NASA will host four astronauts at 10 a.m. CDT Tuesday, May 14, for a media opportunity at the agency’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama.

Sols 4182-4183: We Reached the South Side of Pinnacle Ridge… What’s Next? - We planned quite a drive on Wednesday, with lots of twists and turns over very bumpy terrain, so the team was delighted to learn everything completed as planned when we received our downlink at ~4 am Pacific Time this morning!

NASA Awards Expand Research Capabilities at Institutions Nationwide - NASA is awarding approximately $45 million to 21 higher-education institutions to help build capacity for research.

Why do loved ones with dementia sometimes ‘come back’ before death? - Yen Ying Lim, Monash University and Diny Thomson, Monash University Dementia is often described as “the long goodbye”.

Rare and Endangered, These Non-Parasitic Lampreys Are Far From Home - Learn why the researchers discovered the lampreys far from their supposed home.

How you can make cold-brew coffee in under 3 minutes using ultrasound - A "sonication" time between 1 and 3 minutes is ideal to get the perfect cold brew.

Here’s Where China’s Sample Return Mission is Headed - Humanity got its first look at the other side of the Moon in 1959 when the USSR’s Luna 3 probe captured our first images of the Lunar far side.

Carrington-Level Cluster of Sunspots May Send a ‘Cannibal CME’ Hurtling Toward Earth - A giant sunspot cluster rivaling the one that caused the Carrington Event in 1859 could trigger a cannibal coronal mass ejection.

Exploration-focused training lets robotics AI immediately handle new tasks - Maximum Diffusion Reinforcement Learning focuses training on end states, not process.

That’s Refreshing - An American flamingo takes a moment to drink water in the Indian River at Haulover Canal on Merritt Island on Thursday, Jan. 11, 2024.

Iridium workaround could speed up green hydrogen industry - Combining one of the world’s rarest metals with a comparatively abundant element could help accelerate green hydrogen production, with a Japanese research

Tunnel of love? Cautious adders get a helping hand - The local wildlife trust hopes the tunnels will boost the reptile's numbers by encouraging mating.

NASA Invites Media to Annual Lunabotics Competition - NASA’s 2024 Lunabotics Challenge offers more than 40 college teams from across the country the chance to design, build, and operate their own lunar robots,

NASA’s New Mobile Launcher Stacks Up for Future Artemis Missions - The foundation is set at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida for launching crewed missions aboard the agency’s larger and more powerful SLS (Space Launch

Why Hot Jupiters Spiral into Their Stars - Exoplanets are a fascinating astronomy topic, especially the so-called “Hot Jupiters”.

Does the Milky Way Have Too Many Satellite Galaxies? - The Large and Small Magellanic Clouds are well known satellite galaxies of the Milky Way but there are more.

Chemical tweaks to a toad hallucinogen turns it into a potential drug - Targets a different serotonin receptor from other popular hallucinogens.

How Does The Brain Think? - Thinking builds neural networks, which is why practice improves performance

ADHD Can Carry into Adulthood, and Could Lead to Depression and Anxiety - Learn why attention deficit hyperactivity disorder starts in childhood, but some people don’t outgrow it.

A Buffer Zone for Trees - How frosty pockets in valleys could help protect some trees against climate change.

A Novel Panic Pathway in the Brain - A neural pathway driving panic-like behaviors in mice points to new therapeutic targets.

Hubble Celebrates the 15th Anniversary of Servicing Mission 4 - Fifteen years ago, human hands touched NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope for the last time.

Photograph Collection Finds ‘Tragic Beauty’ in Shorelines Marred by Climate Change - A stunning photograph collection underlines how climate change is altering the world’s coastal and lakeside environments

Healthy Teeth Are Priceless – Here's How Best To Protect Them - Healthy teeth are truly priceless

The wasps that tamed viruses - Some insects have transformed wild viruses into tiny biological weapons.

What’s Your Story? Contest Finalists - Your guide to the most essential developments in life sciences

Analyst on Starlink’s rapid rise: “Nothing short of mind-blowing” - Starlink's estimated free cash flow this year is about $600 million.

Biotium Launches Novel Membrane Dyes Designed for Superior Pan-EV Labeling Over PKH and Other Membrane Dyes - New ExoBrite™ True EV Membrane Stains offer strong signal and near-complete staining of extracellular vesicles.

Humans Shaped Ancient History Across 3 Ages: The Stone, Bronze, and Iron Age - The three ages of the ancient world — Stone, Bronze, and Iron — encompass the formative years of human history in most regions.

The Anthropology of Past Disease Outbreaks Can Help Prevent Future Ones - Three factors determine whether a society experiences disease outbreaks—and how we can fight them

New process results in near complete destruction of PFAS chemicals - US researchers have discovered a new strategy to clean up “forever chemicals” from contaminated water and importantly, it can do so at room temperatures.

Accelerating material characterization: Machine learning meets X-ray absorption spectroscopy - Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) scientists have developed a new approach that can rapidly predict the structure and chemical composition of heterogeneous materials.

NASA Glenn Looking to Lease Facilities - As NASA advances its aviation and spaceflight missions, its facilities and infrastructure need to evolve along with them.

Hubble Glimpses a Star-Forming Factory - The celestial object showcased in this image from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope is the spiral galaxy UGC 9684, which lies around 240 million light-years from Earth in the constellation Boötes.

AI systems are already skilled at deceiving and manipulating humans - Many artificial intelligence (AI) systems have already learned how to deceive humans, even systems that have been trained to be helpful and honest.

ONe novae stellar explosion may be source of our phosphorus - Astronomers have proposed a new theory to explain the origin of phosphorus, one of the elements important for life on Earth.

How the brain is flexible enough for a complex world (without being thrown into chaos) - Many neurons exhibit 'mixed selectivity,' meaning they can integrate multiple inputs and participate in multiple computations.

Outdoing the dinosaurs: What we can do if we spot a threatening asteroid - Someday, an NEO will pose a threat to us.

Will Mexico City Run Out of Drinking Water? - More huge cities are facing Day Zero—the date water taps go dry—just as Cape Town, South Africa, did

Ocean warming triggers Indo-Pacific heatwaves - Warming of the Indian Ocean is behind the current heatwave in the Indo Pacific region, say scientists.

Is Earth Safe from a Nearby Supernova? - An exploding star is a catastrophe on a cosmic scale, but here on Earth we’re safe from such astral disasters—for now

Chemists shows hemoprotein catalysis is way more complicated than we thought - Sometimes, serendipity—or just plain luck—still plays a pivotal role in scientific discovery.

Elusive worm-lizards sport weird, spooky skulls - CT scans of these mysterious creatures turned up bizarre internal features.

Evolutionary algorithm generates tailored 'molecular fingerprints' - A team led by Prof Frank Glorius from the Institute of Organic Chemistry at the University of Münster has developed an evolutionary algorithm that identifies the structures in a molecule that are particularly relevant for a respective question and uses them to encode the properties of the molecules for various machine-learning models.

Ghana reduces malaria deaths by 90 per cent - Malaria mortality in Ghana has fallen by 90 per cent since 2012 thanks to a national action plan and vaccine rollout.

Kenya floods prompts calls for warning systems - Kenya’s most severe flooding in decades show the need for AI- and nature-based mitigation, say climate scientists.

Researchers find unprecedented deep oxidative desulfurization with precisely designed Ti sites - In a study published in the journal National Science Review, a material synthesized by Dr. Shen Yu was used to introduce hydroperoxide into the synthesis system of titanium silicates.

Fight to save African penguin goes to law - Every year there are fewer African penguins and soon there may be none at all, scientists warn.

First Dream Chaser spaceplane needs more work when it gets to launch site - The rest of Dream Chaser's heat shield tiles will be installed at Kennedy Space Center.

May 9, 2024

Super runners live longer than the rest of us: study - Once upon a time, no one thought anyone could run a mile (1.6km) in four minutes or less, and if they could, it was believed the health consequences of the super-human feat would be dire.

Solid-state polymer heat pump gets rid of the heat itself - Polymer changes temperature, shape when charged, moving to where the heat needs to be.

Australian study reveals surprising genetics of African leopards - New Australian-led research has unravelled the evolutionary history of the African leopard (Panthera pardus pardus).

A Scientist Walks Into a Bar … - How comedy plays on our emotions to fight misinformation.

Largest fragment of the human brain mapped - Researchers from Harvard University and Google published the largest synaptic-resolution and 3D reconstruction of a piece of human brain to date.

The Aztecs Sacrificed Humans to Repay Gods, and Other Reasons - Why did the Aztecs sacrifice humans to the gods?

In a First, JWST Confirms an Atmosphere on a Rocky Exoplanet - Milestone observations from the James Webb Space Telescope reveal signs of an atmosphere on the inhospitably hot super-Earth 55 Cancri e

Elon Musk’s Neuralink reports trouble with first human brain chip - It's unclear what caused the retraction or how many threads have become displaced.

Turning trash into treasure: Exploring biotic and abiotic methods for PET plastic upcycling - A paper published in Eco-Environment & Health introduces innovative biotic and abiotic methods for recycling and upcycling polyethylene terephthalate (PET).

How Leaky Datasets Undermine AI Math Reasoning Claims - Questions over tests of AI math abilities suggest we may never know how capable intelligent machines computers can become.

How To Tell If A Conspiracy Theory Is Probably False - Conspiracy theories can muddle people’s thinking

Squeezed by neighbors, planet glows with molten lava - Astrophysicists discovered that an exoplanet is covered with so many active volcanoes that seen from a distance it would take on a fiery, glowing-red hue.

A fragment of human brain, mapped in exquisite detail - Researchers have created the largest synaptic-resolution, 3D reconstruction of a piece of human brain to date, showing in vivid detail each cell and its web of neural connections in a piece of human temporal cortex about half the size of a rice grain.

Why Is the Ocean Salty? - Salt journeys around the planet, leaving its mark at every step — before it's ultimately deposited into the ocean.

Viruses Keep Mice from Stressing Out - Gut viruses influence behavioral responses in mice and may be important players in the gut-brain axis.

Lung Cancer Is The Deadliest, Screening Could Save Many Lives - Lung cancer screening can save lives, but it isn’t accessible to everyone at risk of developing the disease

Game Theory Can Make AI More Correct and Efficient - Researchers are drawing on ideas from game theory to improve large language models and make them more consistent.

Hot compression bonding helps achieve seamless CLAM steel joint - China low activation martensitic (CLAM) steel, as a typical reduced activation ferritic/martensitic steel, is the main candidate structural material for fusion reactors due to its low activation, high mechanical properties, irradiation resistance and corrosion resistance.

How Melting Ice Has Altered Time-Keeping - Climate change could upend how we synchronize global clocks forever.

Will Better Superconductors Transform the World? - Scientists are pursuing materials that can conduct electricity with perfect efficiency under ambient conditions.

Gut Bacteria Slip into the Eye - A gene mutation causes porous gut and retinal barriers, allowing bacteria to travel from one to the other, triggering retinal degeneration in mice.

Learning New Skills Can Help You Think Further Ahead - Recent research sheds light on how you can train your brain to think further ahead.

How Bird Flu Caught the Dairy Industry Off Guard - Understanding how avian influenza jumped into cows can help shape the path to stopping the virus’s spread