Read More News Health 4 months ago Marathon Running and Heart Health: Stress, Not Damage A decade-long study finds transient post-race heart changes in marathon runners but no lasting damage for most recreational athletes. Learn what troponin rises mean and when symptoms warrant urgent review.
Read More News Space 4 months ago Earth's Magnetic Field Funnels Atmosphere to the Moon New research shows Earth's magnetic field can guide charged atmospheric particles along field lines to the Moon. Lunar soil may record Earth's atmospheric history and offer usable volatiles for future explorers.
Read More News General info 4 months ago Rush-Hour Traffic Amplifies Urban Atmospheric Electric Field A Tel Aviv study shows rush-hour traffic and vehicle emissions measurably alter the atmospheric electric field near ground level. NOx causes immediate effects; PM2.5 produces delayed responses, suggesting new monitoring opportunities.
Read More News Health 4 months ago Walk While You Work: How Treadmill Desks Boost Health Discover how a treadmill desk or walking pad can reduce sedentary time, boost daily steps, and improve blood pressure and metabolism. Practical tips, study findings, and expert insight for workers and employers.
Read More News Health 4 months ago A Periodic Table for Multimodal AI: A Unified Framework Emory physicists propose a Variational Multivariate Information Bottleneck framework that organizes multimodal AI methods, guiding loss-function design to retain only task-relevant information and reduce data and compute needs.
Read More News Space 4 months ago Black Hole Twists Spacetime: Evidence for Frame-Dragging Astronomers observed a tidal disruption event (AT2020afhd) where a spinning black hole twisted spacetime, producing a 20-day wobble in both the accretion disk and relativistic jet — direct evidence of frame-dragging.
Read More News Health 4 months ago Youngest Alzheimer's Case: A 19-Year-Old Without Mutations A 19-year-old was diagnosed with probable Alzheimer's disease despite lacking known genetic mutations. This rare early-onset case challenges current understanding and highlights the need for deeper genetic, molecular, and longitudinal research.
Read More News Space 4 months ago January's Rare Wolf Supermoon: A Triple Brightness Boost The Wolf Supermoon on 3 January 2026 will be brighter and slightly larger than usual due to lunar perigee, Earth's perihelion, and clearer winter skies—making this a rare triple-boost lunar event.
Read More News Space 5 months ago Webb Finds Thick Atmosphere on Scorching Super-Earth JWST NIRSpec observations indicate the ultra-hot super-Earth TOI-561 b retains a thick, volatile-rich atmosphere above a global magma ocean, challenging models of atmospheric loss on small, irradiated planets.
Read More News Health 5 months ago Early Brain Signals Predict Alzheimer's Years Ahead Researchers using MEG and a novel spectral-events analysis found altered beta-band neural bursts that predict progression from mild cognitive impairment to Alzheimer’s disease up to years before diagnosis.
Read More News Health 5 months ago When Does Physical Aging Start? 47-Year Study Finds 35 A 47-year Swedish longitudinal study finds physical fitness often peaks by 35. The research shows early declines in aerobic capacity and strength, but exercise at any age improves performance by 5–10%.
Read More News Space 5 months ago Rogue Planet Weighed: Saturn-Mass World Drifting Alone Astronomers measured the mass and distance of a Saturn-mass rogue planet using simultaneous Earth- and space-based microlensing. The result illuminates how planets get ejected and what future surveys may reveal.
Read More News Health 5 months ago Common Diabetes Drugs May Strip Beta Cell Identity New research suggests sulphonylureas, a common class of type 2 diabetes drugs, may drive pancreatic beta cells to lose their functional identity—potentially explaining long-term loss of drug effectiveness.
Read More News Space 5 months ago Why Astronomers Call the Sun a 'Dwarf' Star — Here's Why Why do astronomers call the Sun a "dwarf" despite its huge size? This article explains the G2V classification, spectral type, why the Sun appears yellow from Earth, and how solar evolution will turn it into a red giant.
Read More News Nature 5 months ago Yellow Brick Road Underwater: Ancient Seamount Lakebed A 2022 Nautilus expedition discovered a fractured hyaloclastite flow on a Hawaiian seamount that resembles a yellow brick road. The find highlights volcanic processes and how little of the deep seafloor we've visually explored.
Read More News General info 5 months ago China Switches On Largest Offshore Floating Solar Farm China has brought the HG14 offshore floating solar farm in Dongying, Shandong, to full operation. The 1 GW project—using 2.3 million bifacial panels and fixed-pile platforms—can power about 2.6 million people and is engineered for storms and sea ice.
Read More News Nature 5 months ago Rivers of Danger: Freshwater Mosasaurs Stalked Dinosaurs Isotope analysis of mosasaur teeth from North Dakota shows some mosasaurs lived in freshwater rivers and may have preyed on dinosaurs, revealing unexpected riverine predators in the late Cretaceous.
Read More News Space 5 months ago Champagne Cluster: Cosmic Collision Reveals Dark Matter The Champagne Cluster — two galaxy clusters colliding — offers rare insight into hot gas dynamics and dark matter. Composite Chandra X-ray and optical images reveal merger geometry and timelines.
Read More News Health 5 months ago Dopamine’s Hidden Job: Rethinking Parkinson’s Motor Signals McGill researchers show dopamine may not set movement speed directly but instead provides a baseline condition for movement, reshaping how levodopa and Parkinson’s therapies are understood.
Read More News Health 5 months ago 117-Year-Old's DNA Reveals Clues to Extreme Longevity Analysis of samples from 117-year-old Maria Branyas reveals rare genetic variants, youthful epigenetic and immune signatures, and favorable metabolic markers that may explain her exceptional longevity and suggest biomarkers for healthy aging.