Read More News Space 5 months ago JWST Detects Earliest Supernova from Cosmic Dawn Era A gamma-ray burst detected by SVOM and followed up by JWST revealed the earliest known supernova at redshift 7.3, 720 million years after the Big Bang. The explosion appears similar to modern core-collapse supernovae, with implications for early stars and reionization.
Read More News Space 5 months ago Voyager 2 Flyby: Solar Wind Likely Charged Uranus Belts New analysis suggests Voyager 2’s intense electron readings at Uranus in 1986 resulted from a transient solar wind event. Reinterpreting the flyby changes how we model radiation belts and motivates a dedicated Uranus mission.
Read More News Health 5 months ago Cancer Deaths Could Nearly Double by 2050 — Act Now Global projections show cancer diagnoses and deaths could nearly double by 2050, with the largest increases in low- and middle-income countries. Prevention, diagnosis, and health-system investment can change the trajectory.
Read More News Space 5 months ago Exascale Simulations Reveal Realistic Black Hole Accretion Exascale simulations now model black hole accretion with full general relativity and radiation physics, matching observed spectra and revealing disk, wind, and jet dynamics for stellar-mass systems.
Read More News Health 5 months ago How Microplastics May Worsen Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s New review maps five biological pathways by which microplastics may inflame and damage the brain, potentially worsening Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s. Learn sources of exposure and practical ways to reduce risk.
Read More News Space 5 months ago Milky Way's Two Chemical Tracks Explained by Simulations Simulations from the Auriga project show the Milky Way's two-track chemical signature can arise from starbursts, changing gas inflows and metal-poor circumgalactic gas — not only from a single past collision.
Read More News Space 5 months ago Russia's Soyuz Launch Pad Collapse Grounds Missions A post-launch collapse of a heavy maintenance cabin at Baikonur's Site 31/6 has sidelined Russia's Soyuz crew and cargo launch capability, delaying ISS missions and affecting space and crypto-related payload plans.
Read More News News Space 5 months ago Milky Way Twin Found 1.5 Billion Years After Big Bang, Revealed JWST and gravitational lensing revealed Alaknanda, a grand-design spiral galaxy that formed just 1.5 billion years after the Big Bang, forcing astronomers to rethink early galaxy assembly and rapid disk formation.
Read More News Health 5 months ago Shingles Vaccine Linked to 20% Lower Dementia Risk A Stanford analysis of Wales' shingles vaccine rollout found a 20% lower dementia risk over seven years among vaccinated seniors, suggesting antiviral vaccination may prevent or slow cognitive decline.
Read More News Scientific 5 months ago Light’s Hidden Magnetism: Rethinking the Faraday Effect New research shows light's magnetic field contributes substantially to the Faraday effect, overturning a 180-year assumption and opening paths for optical spin control in spintronics and quantum technologies.
Read More News Health 5 months ago New Study Finds Human Frailty Tipping Point at 75 Years A Dalhousie-led analysis of 12,000+ people suggests the human body crosses a frailty tipping point around age 75, when recovery slows, health deficits accumulate faster, and mortality risk rises sharply.
Read More News Health 5 months ago Nitrous Oxide Offers Rapid Relief for Severe Depression A review finds that controlled nitrous oxide (laughing gas) can reduce depressive symptoms quickly, including in treatment‑resistant cases, but effects are short‑lived and require more trials on dosing and safety.
Read More News Scientific 5 months ago Is the Y Chromosome Doomed? How Men’s Genes Might Evolve The human Y chromosome has lost most ancestral genes, prompting debate: will it disappear or stabilize? This article reviews evidence, mechanisms, species examples, and implications for health and evolution.
Read More News Health 5 months ago Eating Vitamin C Boosts Skin Collagen and Renewal Fast New University of Otago research shows dietary vitamin C—two SunGold kiwifruit daily—raises blood and skin vitamin C, increasing collagen, skin thickness, and epidermal renewal within weeks.
Read More News Health 5 months ago Supercomputer Builds One of the Most Realistic Brains A detailed virtual mouse cortex built on Japan’s Fugaku supercomputer recreates millions of neurons and billions of synapses, enabling noninvasive studies of seizures, brain waves and disease mechanisms.
Read More News Health 5 months ago Appendix Cancer Is Rising Sharply Among Young Adults Appendiceal cancer diagnoses are rising sharply in Gen X and Millennial cohorts. New studies document 3–4x increases for some birth cohorts and researchers are probing diet, environment and genetics.
Read More News Space 5 months ago Einstein Confirmed: Time Passes Faster on Mars, NIST Finds NIST calculations confirm Einstein’s general relativity: time on Mars runs about 477 microseconds per day faster than on Earth. This small difference poses major challenges for Martian navigation and interplanetary communications.
Read More News Health 5 months ago Shingles Vaccine Linked to Lower Dementia Risk and Mortality Analysis of a Welsh shingles vaccination rollout links zoster immunization to fewer new dementia cases, slower decline, and lower dementia-related mortality, suggesting potential prevention and therapeutic roles.
Read More News General info 5 months ago How Hand Gestures Boost Clarity, Credibility and Persuasion Research shows that illustrative hand gestures aligned with speech improve clarity, credibility, and persuasion. Learn how gestures aid comprehension, the neuroscience behind them, practical applications, and training tips.
Read More News Health 5 months ago San Francisco Sues Processed Food Makers Over Health Harm San Francisco filed a pioneering municipal lawsuit against major processed food manufacturers, alleging their ultra-processed products harm public health and drive costly diet-related diseases, prompting debate on regulation, industry responsibility and public policy.