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Latest News

Red and yellow stars against a black background with blue spheres emerging from its central region

168飞艇开奖官网开奖直播 Gaia space telescope discovers 55 'runaway' careening away from stellar cluster at 80 times the speed of sound

Robert Lea published 15 October 24

Using the Gaia space telescope, astronomers have observed 55 massive stars ejected from their home star cluster in the Large Magellanic Cloud at speeds equivalent to 80 times the speed of sound.

Iceman Ötzi reconstruction

45 amazing facial reconstructions, from Stone Age shamans to King Tut

Christina Hughes last updated 15 October 24

New scientific techniques are helping us reconstruct people from the past in uncanny detail.

An underwater submarine wreck

WWII British sub that sank with 64 on board finally found off Greek Island

Tom Metcalfe published 15 October 24

The discovery of the WWII wreck solves an 81-year-old mystery about the submarine's fate.

A black and white photo of a comet with a bright tail and a second fainter line coming off of it in the other direction

Rare illusion gives 'once-in-a-lifetime' comet a seemingly impossible 2nd tail after closest approach to Earth for 80,000 years

Harry Baker published 15 October 24

New photos of comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS appear to show a faint "anti-tail" pointing away in the wrong direction. The puzzling extra limb is the result of a rare illusion that is only possible when our planet is in a certain position.

Render of the top-secret X-37B space plane

Top-secret X-37B space plane will execute 'never-before-seen maneuvers' on its descent to Earth

Rory Bathgate published 15 October 24

Although it isn't clear what the X-37B is used for, its new maneuver would help it to evade detection and perform undetected low-passes over Earth.

An image of the Europa clipper spacecraft. It has a small body with wide wings. Beneath it, Europa is tan and brown with a vein-like pattern.

Europa Clipper blasts off: What's next for NASA's biggest-ever interplanetary spacecraft?

James Price published 15 October 24

NASA just launched a spacecraft the size of a basketball court towards Jupiter's moon Europa. Here's what will happen over the next 10 years.

A satellite photo of 4 elongated glaciers next to one another
4 near-identical glaciers spark new life in Arctic island's 'polar desert' This 2012 satellite photo shows a quartet of near-identical glaciers on Canada's Ellesmere Island. The ice masses help to spark life in the otherwise barren Arctic environment.
Earth from space
Men standing in a river lift barrels and do manual labor
Bear hair and fish weirs: Meet the Indigenous people combining modern science with ancestral principles to protect the land The Heiltsuk of British Columbia are using a mix of traditional principles and modern implementation to protect salmon and bears in their territory.
A closeup picture of a cavity beneath the seafloor with several tubeworms lying beside it. Mussels are also visible on the seabed.
Ghostly white giant worms appear to be reproducing under the seafloor where tectonic plates meet Researchers have discovered enormous tube worms and other creatures thriving in cavities beneath the seafloor on the East Pacific Rise, an ocean ridge near the Galápagos Islands.
a bright white dot sits at the bottom center of a grainy grey image of space with smaller scattered stars.
Phew! No 'doomsday' asteroids hide in famous broken comet's debris stream The Taurid Meteoroid Stream, which is possibly responsible for the famous Tunguska and Chelyabinsk impacts, probably doesn't hide a civilization-killing asteroid.
an acupuncturist applies a needle to a person's back
Acupuncture really works for sciatica pain, study finds A new trial that compared acupuncture to a convincing placebo suggests that the treatment can help relieve sciatica pain.
an image of Jupiter
Jupiter's Great Red Spot is being squeezed, Hubble Telescope finds — and nobody knows why The Hubble Space Telescope has seen Jupiter's Great Red Spot oscillating in width as it drifts around the planet. Could this be related to its overall shrinking?
a broken jade dragon artifact in the dirt
5,000-year-old jade 'dragon' unearthed in tomb in China Archaeologists have found the largest ever jade "dragon" made by the Neolithic Hongshan culture on record.

Planet Earth

Hurricane Milton captured by NASA's GOES-East satellite as it made landfall on Florida's west coast.

Hurricane Milton is tied for the fastest-forming Category 5 hurricane on record. It could become the new normal.

By Ben Turner published 10 October 24

Hurricane Milton captured by NASA's GOES-East satellite as it made landfall on Florida's west coast.

Hurricanes
Floodwater comes up to the bottom of a "no skateboarding" street sign

Here's why storm surge during hurricanes can be so catastrophic

By Anthony C. Didlake Jr. published 9 October 24

How destructive storm surge gets depends on both the hurricane and the shape of the land.

Hurricanes
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LATEST ARTICLES
  1. Red and yellow stars against a black background with blue spheres emerging from its central region
    1
    Gaia space telescope discovers 55 'runaway' careening away from stellar cluster at 80 times the speed of sound
  2. 2
    WWII British sub that sank with 64 on board finally found off Greek Island
  3. 3
    Rare illusion gives 'once-in-a-lifetime' comet a seemingly impossible 2nd tail after closest approach to Earth for 80,000 years
  4. 4
    Top-secret X-37B space plane will execute 'never-before-seen maneuvers' on its descent to Earth
  5. 5
    Europa Clipper blasts off: What's next for NASA's biggest-ever interplanetary spacecraft?

Space

a rocket launching with fire coming from the thruster with mountains in the background.

China’s secretive new 'Thousands Sails' satellites are an astronomer's nightmare, 1st observations reveal

By Harry Baker published 14 October 24

The launch of the Qianfan satellites on Aug. 6 from the Taiyuan Satellite Launch Center.

Space Exploration
A view of a starry sky with an inset image showing the location of the REBELS-25 galaxy

Record-breaking ancient spinning galaxy challenges cosmic evolution theories

By Robert Lea published 14 October 24

Astronomers have discovered the earliest strongly rotating galaxy ever seen that's well-organized rather than chaotic, challenging theories of cosmic evolution.

Cosmology
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archaeology

A bird's eye view of a burial site with many human bones scattered inside

5,000-year-old cemetery in Spain has twice as many females as males, and nobody knows why

By Owen Jarus published 14 October 24

There are more than twice as many females as males buried in an ancient cemetery in Spain, a new study finds — but no one knows why.

Archaeology
A round clay disc with symbolic inscriptions

Phaistos Disk: 3,000-year-old inscriptions from Crete that have never been deciphered

By Tom Metcalfe published 14 October 24

None of the many interpretations of the Phaistos Disk's inscriptions are universally accepted.

Archaeology
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Health

A dual combined antigen test for COVID-19 and the flu.

Is it COVID or the flu? At-home tests can look for both viruses at once

By Julie Sullivan, Wilbur Lam published 14 October 24

A fever and a nasty cough can be symptoms of a range of respiratory illnesses. An antigen test that narrows down the culprits can speed up diagnosis and recovery.

Viruses, Infections & Disease
A digital illustration of a 3D heart with EKG lines superimposed on top

How many times does a heart beat in a day? What about in a lifetime?

By Mindy Weisberger published 13 October 24

Celine Dion sings that "my heart will go on," but how many times does it actually beat in a day or even a lifetime?

Heart & Circulation
An image of a piece of lettuce on one fork and a piece of meat on the other. The pieces of food are manipulated to resemble the profiles of two faces.

Why does meat have more protein than vegetables?

By Marilyn Perkins published 12 October 24

The biological needs of plants and animals affect their cells' protein content, but the story goes deeper than that.

Food & Diet
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Animals

a silhouette of a gibon with its arm in the air as it looks up

Female gibbons 'vogue' and dance like robots — and make sure they have an audience

By Olivia Ferrari published 14 October 24

Female gibbons appear to do robot dances for attention, scientists discover.

Animals
Margay cat, Leopardus wiedii, licking lips. Endangered and native to Central and South America

13 crafty ways animals hunt their prey

By Elise Poore last updated 11 October 24

Spiders swinging lassos, ants setting deadly traps and turtles with deceiving tongues — these animals have the most cunning methods of hunting their prey.

Animals
Broken tooth shown in the jaws of one of the lions.

New DNA findings shed light on Tsavo's infamous man-eating lions

By Elise Poore published 11 October 24

Scientists extract DNA from hair embedded in the Tsavo lions' jaws that reveals the species of prey they ate while they were alive.

Lions
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Human Behavior

A 3D render of a cube with a question mark on it covered in digital code

Do you know your meteor showers from your massive millipedes?

By Alexander McNamara published 12 October 24

Science news quiz It's been a busy week in science news. Can you get all the questions right in our quiz?

Science news quiz
Collage of around 40 people.

You can change your personality intentionally, research shows

By Shannon Sauer-Zavala published 29 September 24

Can people change their personality? Yes, by "making intentional tweaks to their thinking and behavior," research finds.

Human Behavior
A composite of a lost Biblical tree resurrected from 1,000-year-old mystery seed found in the Judean Desert and the human genome stored inside near-indestructible '5D memory crystal'

A lost Biblical tree and a memory crystal that could 'survive to the end of the universe'

By Alexander McNamara published 28 September 24

Science news this week Sept. 28, 2024: Our weekly roundup of the latest science in the news, as well as a few fascinating articles to keep you entertained over the weekend.

Science news this week
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Physics & Mathematics

Robot fortune teller hand and crystal ball

'Can you predict the future? Yes, of course you can.': Inside the 1 equation that can predict the weather, sporting events, and more

By Tom Chivers published 12 October 24

"Life isn’t chess, a game of perfect information, one that can in theory be 'solved.' It's poker, a game where you're trying to make the best decisions using the limited information you have. "

Mathematics
A teal alarm clock sits in front of decorative orange pumpkins

Daylight saving time 2024: When does the time change?

By Jeanna Bryner last updated 10 October 24

Here's a look at when the time changes for daylight saving time 2024, and what is the purpose of daylight saving time in the first place.

Physics & Mathematics
An artist's illustration of an artificial neural network.

Nobel Prize in Physics: 1901-Present

By Live Science Staff last updated 8 October 24

An artist's illustration of an artificial neural network.

Physics & Mathematics
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Chemistry

Close up view of a pile of hexagons with chemical elements symbols (3d render)

Periodic table of elements quiz: How many elements can you name in 10 minutes?

By Alexander McNamara published 14 October 24

Can you name everything from Ac to Zr? Test your knowledge of the periodic table and see if you can top the leaderboard

Elements
A microscopic image of a bubble of water formed around a chunk of palladium

Watch atoms fuse into world's 'smallest bubble' of water in 1st-of-its-kind 'nanoscale' video

By Harry Baker published 10 October 24

A new study captured never-before-seen footage of hydrogen and oxygen atoms combining to form a miniature water droplet out of "thin air." The newly improved reaction could one day help astronauts make water in space.

Chemistry
The monument for Marie Sklodowska Curie, the only person to win a Nobel Prize in two different sciences: the Nobel Prize for physics in 1903 (jointly with her husband), and the Nobel Prize for chemistry in 1911.

Nobel Prize in Chemistry: 1901-Present

By Live Science Staff last updated 10 October 24

The Nobel Prize in Chemistry includes famous winners such as Marie Curie and Otto Hahn.

Chemistry
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Tech

A digital brain with waves passing through it

Scientists design new 'AGI benchmark' that tests whether any future AI model could cause 'catastrophic harm'

By Keumars Afifi-Sabet published 14 October 24

OpenAI scientists have designed MLE-bench — a compilation of 75 extremely difficult tests that can assess whether a future advanced AI agent is capable of modifying its own code and improving itself.

Artificial Intelligence
Sony A7 IV on a tripod against a hedge

Sony A7 IV review

By Kimberley Lane last updated 14 October 24

Review With rumblings of the next-generation model on the horizon, is the Sony A7 IV still worth buying in 2024?

Review
Portrait of black grandmother with teenager granddaughter both are looking into the camera.

'Future You' AI lets you speak to a 60-year-old version of yourself — and it has surprising wellbeing benefits

By Drew Turney published 11 October 24

An MIT-led project asked young users to talk to an AI-powered simulation of their 60-year-old selves through a chatbot interface. The experience led to decreased anxiety and a boost in optimism.

Artificial Intelligence
VIEW MORE

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