Today's Science News

October 17, 2025

Tyrannosaurus next: a different view of dinosaurs - Aided by new discoveries and refined investigation methods, science is changing the way we see dinosaurs.

October 16, 2025

Russian cosmonauts install semiconductor experiment, jettison old HDTV camera during spacewalk outside ISS - Russian cosmonauts Sergey Ryzhikov and Alexey Zubritsky worked outside the International Space Station on Tuesday (Oct. 16), conducting a spacewalk to install, retrieve and jettison equipment.

Rogue black hole shocks astronomers with record radio blast - For the first time, scientists observed a black hole tearing apart a star far from its galaxy’s center, producing the fastest-changing radio signals ever recorded.

What Happened to Those "Little Red Dots" Webb Observed? - An international team of astronomers addressed the mystery of the "Little Red Dots" (LRDs) observed by Webb.

Manta Rays Dive Almost 4,000 Feet into the Deep Ocean — Not for Food, But for Directions - Learn how tracking data shows that manta rays plunge more than 4,000 feet down in the deep sea not to hunt, but to find their bearings and travel across the open ocean. 

Humans in Europe Might’ve Taken Toolmaking Inspiration From Neanderthals - Learn more about the differences between Lebanese and Italian tools, which contradict the theory that modern human migrations spread a single stone tool culture from the Near East to Europe.

Brain Cells on a Computer Chip Offer Advanced Medical Treatments and Use Less Energy - Learn more about the new biological computer that fuses brain cells and computer chips — and uses far less energy.

Ancient Human Brains Adapted From Exposure to Lead Poisoning, Providing an Evolutionary Advantage - Learn how lead exposure impacted ancient humans' health and brain activity up to 2 million years ago.

Are You Calm When Scared, or Do You Panic and Flee? A Brain Circuit Explains Why - A little-known brain region helps us decide when to panic and relax, reshaping our understanding of how fear works.

Comet Lemmon's ghostly tail haunts the skies above England (photo) - Photographer Josh Dury has captured a gorgeous view of Comet C/2025 A6 (Lemmon) brightening the skies above the UK as it nears planet Earth.

Research on Previously Unexamined Apollo 17 Moon Rocks Reveals Exotic Sulfur - Samples from one of the Apollo 17 drive tubes was recently opened and analyzed by Brown University researchers, who found surprising sulfur isotopes signatures inside.

Watch SpaceX's Super Heavy Starship booster hover in mid-air before plunging into the sea (video) - SpaceX video from Starship's Oct. 13 launch shows the rocket's Super Heavy booster hovering over the gulf before its dive into the deep.

Microbes Or Their DNA Could Survive In Martian Ice And A Future Rover Could Dig For It - Frozen in time, ancient microbes or their remains could be found in Martian ice deposits during future missions to the red planet.

Half-Male, Half-Female Spider Discovered In Thailand - A new arachnid species and a rare intersex specimen in one fell swoop The post Half-Male, Half-Female Spider Discovered In Thailand appeared first on Nautilus .

Homo Ergaster: The Early Human Who Looked Almost Like Us - Learn more about Homo ergaster , an early human ancestor with pivotal features.

Drip by drip: The hidden blueprint for stalagmite growth - Researchers have mathematically described stalagmite shapes, linking their forms to calcite precipitation rates and enhancing climate history reconstruction.

Stinkbug ‘leg organ’ grows fungi for unexpected purpose - Scientists have discovered a new kind of symbiotic organ on the hind legs of the adult female Japanese dinidorid stinkbug Megumenum gracilicorne.

Dry ice may burrow through Mars like sandworms in 'Dune' - Blocks of carbon dioxide ice appear to carve mysterious gullies on Mars as they melt down dune slopes and blast away sand.

CO2 levels reach record new high, locking in more global warming - Greenhouse gas concentrations increased by a record amount in 2024 as more carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide became locked in Earth's atmosphere, a World Meteorological Organization report finds.

The Life of James W.C. Pennington: Teacher of Newtown, Student of Yale (1833–1838) - James W.C. Pennington shaped education for freedom, built community structures, and integrated activism against slavery and segregation during his life.

Astronomers close in on ancient signal from 'one of the most unexplored periods in our universe' - A faint radio "whisper" from ancient hydrogen reveals the universe was heating up long before it filled with starlight.

A Mind on Fire: Stephen Greenblatt’s Marlowe and the Invention of Modern Risk - Stephen Greenblatt resurrects Christopher Marlowe’s perilous brilliance—poet, spy, heretic—in a vivid portrait of genius forged amid Elizabethan danger.

Watch the 2nd-ever launch of China's record-breaking Gravity-1 rocket (video) - The Chinese company Orienspace's Gravity-1 solid rocket launched for the second time ever on Oct. 10, sending three satellites to orbit from the deck of a ship.

An Iranian volcano appears to have woken up — 700,000 years after its last eruption - Taftan volcano near the border of Pakistan has shown signs of unrest in recent years.

Quitting smoking, even late in life, linked to slower cognitive decline - Quitting smoking significantly slows cognitive decline in older adults, potentially reducing dementia risk, but further research is necessary.

Vast gearing up to launch its Haven-1 private space station in 2026 - Vast's Haven-1 is poised to become the first privately built space station, marking a turning point in the post-International Space Station era.

Bears kill seven people in Japan this year as attacks hit record high - Seven people have died since April this year - the highest number since figures started being recorded in 2006, officials say.

SpaceX has plans to launch Falcon Heavy from California—if anyone wants it to - There's no big rush to bring SpaceX's Falcon Heavy to Vandenberg Space Force Base.

Black eyes, orbital fractures and retinal detachment: Pickleball-related eye injuries are on the rise in the US - A new analysis suggests the rate of pickleball-related eye injuries has increased dramatically in the U.S. as the sport gains popularity.

Rule-breaking black hole destroys star in puzzling way: 'This is truly extraordinary' - The so-called tidal disruption event also produced two puzzling delayed outbursts.

Record-breaking 'dark object' found hiding within a warped 'Einstein ring' 10 billion light-years away - Researchers have found a suspected clump of dark matter lurking within the luminous halo of a well-known "Einstein ring."

The Oral-B iO Series 9 is one of our all-time favorite smart-enabled electric toothbrushes and now it's $100 cheaper - The ultra-advanced Oral-B iO Series 9 electric toothbrush is back on sale, now with a huge 30% discount at Best Buy and Walmart.

'Most pristine' star ever seen discovered at the Milky Way's edge — and could be a direct descendant of the universe's first stars - Astronomers have discovered a surprisingly "pristine" red giant with the lowest concentration of heavy elements ever seen in a star.

The Big Picture: Pixel Poetry – Inside an AMOLED Screen at Microscopic Scale - AMOLED displays utilize microscopic organic LEDs for vibrant images, delivering inky blacks and high contrast thanks to self-emissive sub-pixels.

Antarctica is starting to look a lot like Greenland—and that isn’t good - Global warming is awakening sleeping giants of ice at the South Pole.

Chasing comets: How to photograph comets Lemmon and 3I/ATLAS - Comets don't visit often — here's how to capture comet Lemmon, comet 3I/ATLAS, on your camera as they dance across our skies.

Watch Europe's upcoming PLATO exoplanet hunter spread its 'wings' (video) - PLATO powered up and extended its solar panels as the exoplanet-hunting spacecraft readies for launch as soon as December.

Coca Leaf: Native Heritage Or Dangerous Drug? - Due to President Clinton's 1994 DSHEA law (Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act of 1994), and diverting science funding to the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine, a large number of people believe acupuncture works and that supplements can be alternatives to medicine.Acupuncture is the placebo effect but some natural p

This Lego Star Wars set is an awesome recreation of the iconic movie logo and is now at its lowest ever price - A brilliant focal point for any Star Wars Lego collection, this 700-piece set has a 20% saving in this Amazon deal.

5,000 years ago, Stone Age people in China crafted their ancestors' bones into cups and masks - Archaeologists in China found a collection of human bones that showed signs of being "worked" like any other natural material.

New space debris shield? Satellites and astronauts could suit up in novel 'Space Armor' - Humanity has a new tool in the fight against space junk — "Space Armor," a multi-functional composite that could protect both spacecraft and astronauts.

Sinking megacities at risk from fastest sea level rise in millennia - Coastal megacities in southeastern China face a future of accelerating sea level rise compounded by sinking land caused mostly by human activities, according to a new study in the journal Nature.

Where the ridge meets the river | Space photo of the day for Oct. 16, 2025 - From above Earth, LandSat 9's keen eye captures a stunning Y-shaped meeting of ridge and river in China's Tarim Basin.

Toyota to launch world's first EV with a solid-state battery by 2027 — they're expected to last longer and charge faster - New solid-state batteries will be made from a new "highly durable" cathode material and will power a car for much longer than conventional EV batteries.

Northern lights may be visible in 15 US states tonight - Auroras may be visible from Alaska to Iowa as geomagnetic storm conditions are predicted for tonight.

Robotic platform uses AI to cut chemical process design time from months to days - A team from the Universitat Jaume I (UJI) has developed an innovative robotic platform, powered by artificial intelligence, that promises to revolutionize the design of sustainable chemical processes.

'Star Wars,' 'Blade Runner,' and 'The Thing' poster artist Drew Struzan dies at 78 - Struzan's signature artwork defined an entire generation of Hollywood filmmaking.

DAILY DOSE: New York confirms first locally acquired chikungunya in six years; Study finds no link between first-trimester mRNA COVID vaccination and birth defects. - New York reports its first local chikungunya case in six years, emphasizing mosquito control and precautions for public health safety.

From poison to power: How lead exposure helped shape human intelligence - Long before humans built cities or wrote words, our ancestors may have faced a hidden threat that shaped who we became.

Cities across the world are sinking. Here’s how they might rebound - Affected coastal cities tend to flood more often — a growing threat in this era of continuing sea level rise.

Stalagmites adhere to a single mathematical rule, scientists discover - Scientists discover all stalagmites growing from cave floors follow a mathematical rule that explains how these mineral formations develop into different shapes.

Watch 2 Russian cosmonauts spacewalk outside the International Space Station today - Russian cosmonauts Sergey Ryzhikov and Alexey Zubritskiy will conduct a spacewalk outside the ISS today (Oct. 16), and you can watch it live.

Can Embracing the Unknown Save Us From Dystopia? - An interview with Daniel Wilson, author of shamanic techno-thriller Hole in the Sky The post Can Embracing the Unknown Save Us From Dystopia?

SpaceX launches 28 Starlink satellites to orbit on 130th Falcon 9 flight of the year - SpaceX launched 28 more of its Starlink broadband satellites on Thursday morning (Oct. 16), sending them up from Florida's Space Coast.

Asteroid Ryugu’s hidden waters could explain how Earth got its oceans - Ryugu’s samples reveal that water activity on asteroids lasted far longer than scientists thought, possibly reshaping theories of how Earth gained its oceans.

Greener gold: Sustainable gold extraction process achieved through cyanide recycling - Since the modern gold rushes of the 1970s and 1980s, gold has been one of Australia's major exports.

A giant asteroid hit Earth, but its crater is missing - Researchers discovered a new field of ancient tektites in South Australia, revealing a long-forgotten asteroid impact.

Australia's rainforests are releasing more carbon than they absorb, warn scientists - Australia's rainforests are the first in the world to make the "concerning" switch, say scientists.

Scientists just found real teeth growing on a fish’s head - Scientists discovered true teeth growing on the head of the spotted ratfish, a distant shark relative.

Artificial reef created at offshore wind farm - The reef protects the wind turbine and serves as a home for a wide range of marine life.

Mexico’s scientists urge rules on gene-edited crops - Mexican scientists call for regulations to distinguish between gene-edited and genetically modified (GM) crops.

Forged in fire: The 900°C heat that built Earth’s stable continents - New research reveals that Earth’s continents owe their stability to searing heat deep in the planet’s crust.

Quantum crystals could spark the next tech revolution - Auburn scientists have designed new materials that manipulate free electrons to unlock groundbreaking applications.

How Black Holes Produce Powerful Relativistic Jets - In a recent study, theoretical physicists at Goethe University Frankfurt described the origin of powerful jets emanating from the core regions of galaxies using a series of complex simulations.

Who or what dug Mars’ mysterious gullies? The answer is explosive - CO₂ ice blocks on Mars may dig gullies as they slide and sublimate in the thin atmosphere.

October 15, 2025

This tiny worm uses static electricity to hunt flying insects - A parasitic worm uses static electricity to launch itself onto flying insects, a mechanism uncovered by physicists and biologists at Emory and Berkeley.

Mom’s voice boosts language-center development in preemies’ brains, study finds - A study shows that premature babies exposed to their mother's voice recordings have enhanced language pathways, promoting early brain development.

The Taurid Meteor Showers Are Already Shining, and May Flash Shimmering Fireballs This Fall 2025 - Observe the fiery Southern and Northern Taurids, a pair of potentially flashy meteor showers that are set to peak this November 2025, all thanks to the debris of an ancient comet.

Woman Consumed Eight Frogs Alive to Cure Her Back Pain, and Science Says This May Have Ancient Roots - Learn how an unconventional folk cure landed one woman in the hospital, yet the idea that frogs hold pain-relieving powers isn’t as far-fetched as it sounds.

The Oldest Dinosaur Was Nyasasaurus, Which Lived During the Middle Triassic and Stood 3 Feet Tall - The oldest dinosaur was named Nyasasaurus.

Ancient Shipwreck Cargo Sheds Light on Iron Age Trade And a Lost Mediterranean Seaport  - Learn about three ship cargoes that were found off the coast of Israel, unveiling the history of an ancient port where trade flourished. 

Not-so-dark matter? Mysterious substance might leave red and blue 'fingerprints' on light - A new study suggests dark matter could subtly tint or polarize light, leaving faint color clues that next-generation telescopes might detect.

The Nautilus Reading List About the Cosmos - Our writers have read a universe of books on space and astronomy.

Rice weevil on a grain of rice wins 2025 Nikon Small World contest - Nikon Small World photomicrography contest is an annual reminder that science can be beautiful as well as informative.

The Butterflies of Marinduque: Small Wings, Big Changes - National Geographic Society & TNC extern Dustin Francisco shares how butterfly farming in Marinduque reveals the fragile balance between livelihood, culture, and conservation.

Watch a charred SpaceX Starship land in the ocean after acing Flight Test 11 (video) - New SpaceX footage from Starship Flight 11 shows the final moments of Oct. 13 mission, which ended with a picture-perfect splashdown in the Indian Ocean.

A 150-million-year-old fossil with a singular adaptation may unlock the origin of quironomids - A new fossilized insect species from Australia's Jurassic period suggests freshwater Chironomidae originated in Gondwana, revealing evolutionary insights.

REM sleep may reshape what we remember - Researchers trace how different sleep stages may fine-tune what we remember, trading specifics for more general knowledge.

Vine robot grows from the tip by turning its skin inside out - Researchers have developed steerable, vine-like robots that can navigate convoluted paths in delicate environments for applications such as surgical procedures and engine inspections.

What's Happening In The Brains Of Protesters? - From Los Angeles to Portland to New York City, political protests have become common.

Why October is the perfect time to look for the Andromeda galaxy - October is an excellent time to observe the Andromeda spiral galaxy as it passes high overhead in the Autumn night sky.

How Common Really Is Prostate Cancer and How Easy Is it to Get Tested? - Learn more about prostate cancer and why there is a debate over whether or not patients should get tested for it.

Skeleton-filled well in Croatia likely holds remains of Roman soldiers, study finds - Archaeologists have discovered a mass grave of Roman soldiers hidden inside an ancient well in Croatia.

How scientists are using spinning dead stars to find ripples in the fabric of spacetime - Identifying the gravitational waves from black holes binaries could also make it clearer to detect primordial gravitational waves that date back to inflation at the moment of the Big Bang.

Watch the moment a brilliant green fireball meteor turns night to day over Tennessee (video) - A fireball flared to life in the skies over southern America in the early hours of Oct. 14, briefly turning night to day before fragmenting as it neared the surface.

Asteroid discovered only 2 days ago just flew by Earth closer than the moon - A small asteroid, called 2025 TP5, safely flew by our planet on Oct. 15 at about a quarter of the distance to the moon.

Jane Goodall revolutionized animal research, but her work had some unintended consequences. Here's what we've learned from them. - Following Jane Goodall's death, chimp experts explain how her early observations still influence our understanding of our ape cousins.

'Predator: Badlands' is getting a prequel comic, but it's not coming out until after the movie - This official tie-in title was created in collaboration with the film's director, Dan Trachtenberg.

Generation of harmful slow electrons in water is a race between intermolecular energy decay and proton transfer - When high-energy radiation interacts with water in living organisms, it generates particles and slow-moving electrons that can subsequently damage critical molecules like DNA.

Cheaper than Prime Day: Our favorite telescope is now $300 off at Amazon - The Celestron NexStar 8SE is now the cheapest we've seen it since January — and there's no guarantee it'll be discounted for Black Friday, either.

Undergrads uncover conserved copper-binding gene cluster in marine bacteria - This fall, 20 Georgia Tech students published a paper—the culmination of work done during a semester-long laboratory course.

Researchers reveal competitive mechanism of dual-mode nitrogen fixation in metal carbide clusters - Contemporary industrial nitrogen fixation largely relies on the energy-intensive Haber-Bosch process, which operates under extremely high temperatures and pressures.

James Webb telescope finds something 'very exciting' shooting out of first black hole ever imaged - Using the James Webb Space Telescope's infrared camera, scientists have captured the gigantic jet blasting out of M87* in a new light.

A new private moon lander rises: Impulse Space throws its hat into the lunar ring - Impulse Space — which was founded by Tom Mueller, SpaceX's second-ever employee — just announced that it plans to build a robotic moon lander to help open the lunar frontier.

Foldable Solar Sails Could Help With Aerobraking and Atmospheric Reentry - Use cases for smart materials in space exploration keep cropping up everywhere.

AT 2024tvd: A Black Hole Is Eating A Star Outside A Galaxy Center, And Spitting Parts Back Out - When you picture a black hole, you probably picture in the center of a galaxy with matter swirling toward it.

Controversial UK oil field publishes full scale of climate impact - The impact from the Rosebank oil field is estimated at nearly 250 million tonnes of planet warming CO2.

SpaceX launches 21 communications satellites for the US military (video) - SpaceX plans to launch 21 satellites for an advanced new U.S. military constellation this evening (Oct. 15), and you can watch the action live.

The Hidden Math of Ocean Waves Crashes Into View - The math of even the simplest ocean waves is notoriously uncooperative.

A giant weak spot in Earth's magnetic field is getting bigger — and it could be bad news for satellites - Satellite data reveal that a weak region in Earth's magnetic field has grown by an area roughly half the size of continental Europe in the last 10 years.

Believing misinformation is a “win” for some people, even when proven false - "Winning" means prioritizing independence from outside influence over being right.

Methane leaks multiplying beneath Antarctic ocean spark fears of climate doom loop - Researchers have discovered dozens of new methane seeps littering the ocean floor in the Ross Sea coastal region of Antarctica, raising concerns of an unknown positive climate feedback loop that could accelerate global warming.

Satellites watch as record-breaking ocean waves carry a storm's power across the sea - Satellites recorded the largest ocean swells ever seen from space, highlighting how massive waves can act as storm “messengers,” carrying a storm’s power across entire oceans.

Prototype flow battery runs on sugar and vitamins - Chemists have designed a new kind of flow battery that takes inspiration from biological systems to produce energy from glucose (sugar) with the help of a riboflavin (vitamin B2) catalyst.

Deep-space dishes dot the desert | Space photo of the day for Oct. 15, 2025 - Beneath the shadow of Chile's Licancabur volcano, the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) peers into the coldest and most distant reaches of the universe.

Humble Yeast Has Planetary Survival Skills - Rather randomly I’ve just returned from a theatre tour where my science show featured yeast in one of the experiments, so when research about yeast surviving Martian conditions crossed my desk, it immediately piqued my interest.

Government told to prepare for 2C warming by 2050 - The Climate Change Committee said the UK should make climate change adaptions beyond the Paris Agreement.

When Fire Brought Ice to Mars - Mars is a planet of mystery!

This type of meat supercharges muscle growth after workouts - Scientists discovered that lean pork builds muscle more effectively post-workout than high-fat pork, even with identical protein levels.

This European treatment for joint pain just passed a major scientific test - Korean researchers found that low-dose radiation therapy eased knee pain and improved movement in people with mild to moderate osteoarthritis.

Connections at school could limit bullying’s harm to mental health - Recently bullied teens with a strong sense of connectedness at school reported fewer signs of depression than those without it, a new study finds.

DAILY DOSE: Cornell Engineers Create Revolutionary “Microwave Brain” Chip; Breakthrough Technology Rapidly Destroys “Forever Chemicals” in Water. - Cornell's microwave brain chip and Rice's eco-friendly PFAS solution illustrate innovative advancements in technology addressing computation and environmental challenges.

We were wrong about how the moon's largest and oldest crater formed — and that's great news for NASA's next lunar landing - A new study has revealed that our understanding of the South Pole-Aitken basin was quite literally back-to-front, meaning astronauts on NASA's future Artemis III mission may be able to collect valuable samples of ancient radioactive material, known as KREEP.

Did a NASA exoplanet-hunting balloon really 'crash' in Texas? Not according to the scientist behind the flight - NASA launched an exoplanet-hunting experiment Oct. 1 despite the government shutdown.

Diagnostic dilemma: A woman's nausea was triggered by a huge mass in her stomach — which doctors dissolved with diet soda - A woman's abdominal discomfort turned out to be caused by a build up of food in her stomach.

How a Rare Disease Could Yield a Pandemic Drug - This autoimmune disorder protects those who have it from viruses of all kinds The post How a Rare Disease Could Yield a Pandemic Drug appeared first on Nautilus .

Chemists achieve ethylene electrosynthesis from acetylene at ampere-level current density - Ethylene is traditionally obtained through steam cracking of petroleum-derived hydrocarbons.

Physicists discover mysterious new type of time crystal - Scientists at TU Wien have uncovered that quantum correlations can stabilize time crystals—structures that oscillate in time without an external driver.

Chemical language models don't need to understand chemistry, study demonstrates - Language models are now also being used in the natural sciences.

It actually rains on the Sun. Here’s the stunning reason - Scientists at the University of Hawaiʻi have discovered why it rains on the Sun.

These giant planets shouldn’t exist. But they do - Astronomers are investigating a strange class of exoplanets known as eccentric warm Jupiters — massive gas giants that orbit their stars in unexpected, elongated paths.

Astronomers detect a cosmic “heartbeat” in pulsar signals - Researchers analyzing pulsar data have found tantalizing hints of ultra-slow gravitational waves.

Manta rays go to extremes to build mental maps of the ocean - Giant oceanic manta rays, the largest species of ray, glide thousands of kilometres across vast, featureless stretches of open ocean between the tropical and subtropical habitats they call home.

A 151-million-year-old fly just changed what we know about evolution - Scientists have uncovered a 151-million-year-old midge fossil in Australia that challenges long-held views about insect evolution.

Red Tractor ad banned for misleading environmental claims - The Advertising Standards Authority upheld a complaint by environment charity River Action.

Solving the Mystery of Solar Rain - It rains on the Sun!

Scientists unlock a 100-year-old quantum secret to supercharge solar power - Scientists at the University of Cambridge have uncovered a surprising quantum effect inside an organic material, something once thought impossible outside metals.

When Black Holes Don’t Play by the Rules - Scientists have begun to piece together the origin story of a cataclysmic collision between two black holes that met their fate on an unusual orbital path.

October 14, 2025

MIT scientists find metals hold secret atomic patterns - MIT researchers found that metals retain hidden atomic patterns once believed to vanish during manufacturing.

Pictured: Winning entries for Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2025 - South African photographer Wim van den Heever takes the main prize for his shot

The viral 'Chicago Rat Hole' wasn't actually made by a rat, scientists claim - After researching the rodent indent, scientists are over 98% sure it came from a squirrel.

SpaceX Veteran Lays Out Impulse Space's Roadmap for Making Deliveries to the Moon - Impulse Space, the California-based venture founded by veteran SpaceX engineer Tom Mueller, has unveiled its proposed architecture for delivering medium-sized payloads to the moon, starting as early as 2028.

Haunting image of a rare hyena lurking in a ghost town wins 2025 Wildlife Photographer of the Year award - South African photographer Wim van den Heever has received this year's Wildlife Photographer of the Year award for his image of a brown hyena outside a ruined diamond mining town.

Why Do Whales and Dolphins Beach Themselves, and Is Dementia to Blame? - Learn more about the tentative ties between brain degeneration and beaching in dolphins, which could become more and more common as climate change continues.

A Growing Weak Spot in Earth's Magnetic Field May Cause More Satellites to Short Circuit  - Learn about the growth of the South Atlantic Anomaly, a region where Earth's magnetic field has significantly weakened.

Hippos Lived Alongside Mammoths 47,000 Years Ago During the Last Ice Age - Learn how radiocarbon dating and ancient DNA analysis revealed that hippos were alive and thriving during Europe’s last ice age.

How People With ADHD Can Harness Mind Wandering and Enhance Creativity - Learn why consciously letting thoughts drift,  not just impulsive distraction, could help explain why people with ADHD often excel at innovation.

Ancient Romans Gave Tiny Bronze Skeletons to Party Guests As a Morbid Reminder to Live Life - Learn more about "Larva Convivalis,” or banquet ghosts that served as a morbid reminder that you won’t live forever, so live while you can.

Solar wind tears a chunk from Comet Lemmon's tail in incredible new astrophotography images - See how the solar wind shredded Comet Lemmon's tail in an extraordinary view from Earth

Do You Have A Sixth Sense? NIH Funds An Interoception Study To Find Out - The process by which the nervous system continuously receives and interprets the body’s physiological signals to keep vital functions running smoothly, a "sixth sense" called interoception that tells your brain when you need to breathe, when your blood pressure declines or when you have an infection, is getting some star power; a Nobel laureate neu

The most devastating extreme weather events of the year: Gallery - Extreme weather events have caused devastation in a number of U.S. regions this year.

Getting even bigger: What's next for SpaceX's Starship after Flight 11 success - SpaceX launched its Starship megarocket for the 11th time on Monday (Oct. 13), on a successful test flight that marked the end of the road for "Version 2" of the vehicle.

Scales preserved for 52 million years due to fatty fish skin - Australian researchers have discovered why a fossilised fish (Diplomystus dentatus) was unearthed from the ‘Fossil Basin’ region of the US state of Wyoming

Best space strategy games, ranked - Conquer the cosmos and lead ships, fleets, and even entire civilizations to victory in the best space strategy games.

NASA lays off 550 employees at Jet Propulsion Laboratory in sweeping 'realignment' of workforce - NASA has announced a new wave of layoffs at its Jet Propulsion Laboratory, as the agency undergoes a sweeping "realignment" of its workforce.

Medicaid Emergency Room Costs For Illegal Immigrants Under $4 Billion In 2022 - A cross-sectional analysis of emergency Medicaid expenditures from data in the 2022 Medicaid Budget and Expenditure System found that of the 38 states plus Washington, DC, was nominal compared to overall spending.There are confounders.

What is the weak nuclear force and why is it important? - The weak nuclear force doesn't play by the normal rules — and, in fact, it breaks one of the biggest rules of all.

Astronomers spot the most powerful and distant 'odd radio circle' ever seen - With help from citizen scientists, astronomers have found the most powerful and distant "odd radio circle" ever detected.

‘Chinese lantern’ structure shifts into more than a dozen shapes for various applications - Researchers developed a polymer lantern that changes shapes via compression and twisting, controlled remotely, enabling various applications.

Aurora alert! Several coronal mass ejections are racing toward Earth and could spark impressive northern lights this week - Scientists say a train of CMEs could impact Earth's magnetic field Oct. 15–17, bringing a chance of northern lights across northern North America.