Editor in chief Nancy Shute discusses the audacious ways scientists are considering to combat Earth's rising sea levels.
Life of the party Margaret S. Collins, the first Black female entomologist in the United States to earn a Ph.D., overcame racism and sexism to become a field biologist and termite expert, life sciences writer Susan Milius reported in “Termite Pioneer.” “I had the honor of knowing [Margaret S. Collins] in the early 1990s, when […]
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WashU Medicine-led trial evaluating investigational drug from Eli Lilly and Company aims to stop disease before symptoms arise Researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have enrolled the first participants in an international clinical trial designed to prevent Alzheimer’s disease in young adults at high risk. The study aims to determine whether

The warning was issued after an uneven placement obstructed urine flow into the bladder. Doctors warn that an improperly positioned menstrual cup can cause more than just leakage—it may lead to serious complications, such as uterohydronephrosis, a condition in which a swollen kidney results from blocked urine flow into the bladder. This warning follows a

Gaining insight could help understand the timing and process of life’s emergence. A research team led by a Rutgers-New Brunswick scientist has found that water arrived on Earth later in its formation than previously believed. This discovery has important implications for understanding when life first emerged on the planet. The study, published in Geochimica et

Scientists have long thought that the South Pole-Aitken basin was formed by a shallow-angle impact, but new research suggests otherwise. A study using NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter data found evidence of a more direct impact, creating a rounder crater and distributing deep lunar materials more evenly. This finding could greatly influence NASA’s Artemis missions, as

Scientists have found that people with diabetes are more likely to develop antibiotic-resistant infections. Staphylococcus aureus, a common and dangerous bacterium, thrives in the high-sugar environment of diabetics, allowing resistant mutations to take over rapidly. This alarming discovery highlights the urgent need for better infection control strategies. Staph Infections and Diabetes: A Deadly Combination Antibiotics

A breakthrough chip connection system using light instead of metal wiring could eliminate a major computing bottleneck, supercharging AI development. Funded by a $2M NSF grant and backed by industry leaders, the project aims to make AI models faster and more efficient. By dynamically reconfiguring optical pathways, this innovation could revolutionize high-performance computing and redefine

For decades, people believed absolute pitch was an exclusive ability granted only to those with the right genetics or early music training. But new research from the University of Surrey proves otherwise. It’s been a long-held belief that absolute pitch — the ability to identify musical notes without a reference — is a rare talent

Water isn’t just liquid, ice, or vapor — under extreme conditions, it can transform into exotic phases, such as the newly observed plastic ice VII. This hybrid phase, predicted years ago but only recently confirmed using cutting-edge neutron spectrometers, exhibits both solid-like structure and liquid-like molecular motion. Beyond the Familiar: Water’s Many Phases In everyday

KAIST researchers have discovered a molecular switch that can revert cancer cells back to normal by capturing the critical transition state before full cancer development. Using a computational gene network model based on single-cell RNA sequencing, they identified key molecular mechanisms behind cancer reversion. Professor Kwang-Hyun Cho’s research team has recently gained recognition for developing

Researchers are unlocking secrets of our solar system by analyzing asteroid Bennu samples, some of the most pristine ever collected. These fragments date back 4.5 billion years and contain salts, including halite (common table salt), suggesting past briny environments. Such conditions, known to support organic molecule development, provide a glimpse into the chemistry that may

Want a fast, reliable check on your relationship? The Valentine Scale, backed by research, helps couples gauge trust, emotional closeness, and communication in just seven questions — plus, it’s free to try online. Romantic relationships play a crucial role in psychological well-being, enhancing quality of life, and helping prevent mental health issues. However, there are

Scientists have unlocked a revolutionary way to generate proton beams using high-powered lasers and a simple stream of water. Unlike conventional methods requiring large, costly accelerators, this approach uses laser-plasma accelerators to produce ultra-fast proton beams in a compact space. A Breakthrough in Proton Beam Acceleration Scientists have developed a novel method to generate fast,

A new study published in Nature emphasizes the urgent need for immediate action to help people adapt to changing conditions and protect these biodiversity hotspots. Farmers in Africa’s mountain regions are witnessing dramatic shifts in local weather, including higher temperatures, diminished fog, altered rainfall patterns, and more frequent extreme events like droughts and floods. This

Scientists have found a way to achieve negative refraction—where light bends the “wrong” way—using carefully arranged atomic arrays instead of engineered metamaterials. This breakthrough has enormous implications, potentially leading to superlenses that see beyond microscopic limits and even cloaking devices. Breaking the Rules of Light with Atomic Arrays For the first time, scientists have achieved

Euclid, a space telescope on a mission to uncover the secrets of dark matter and dark energy, has already made a stunning discovery: a perfectly formed Einstein ring hidden in a well-known galaxy. This rare phenomenon, predicted by Einstein’s theory of relativity, reveals the power of gravitational lensing, allowing scientists to glimpse far-off galaxies otherwise

A study found that injecting mesenchymal stem cells into periocular tissue effectively reduces eye inflammation without causing harmful side effects. Graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) is a serious and common complication of stem cell transplantation, occurring when the donor’s immune cells attack the recipient’s tissues. Among its various manifestations, ocular GVHD is particularly difficult to manage, often

Scientists have found methods to convert plastic waste into valuable chemicals. One approach breaks plastics into olefins for producing alcohols, while another transforms them into fatty acids for detergents. These processes reduce reliance on fossil fuels and support a more sustainable plastic economy. Turning Plastic Waste into High-Value Chemicals Researchers have developed new methods to

Researchers from SANKEN (The Institute of Scientific and Industrial Research) at Osaka University have discovered that temperature-controlled conductive networks in vanadium dioxide significantly improve the sensitivity of silicon devices to terahertz light. High-speed, low-power electronic devices are essential for wireless communication. Traditionally, increasing speed has involved shrinking device size, but as miniaturization progresses, fabrication becomes

A massive meteor strike on Mars sent shockwaves across the planet, revealing that some of its tremors weren’t tectonic but impact-driven. AI and high-resolution images confirmed the link, changing how scientists interpret Marsquakes. This discovery improves predictions for future missions and highlights the need for planetary defense against space hazards. A Meteor Strike Shakes Mars

A surprising new study suggests that COVID-19 may not have originated from bats or pangolins, but rather from a rare fusion of human diseases. Using an advanced AI-driven approach called max-logistic intelligence, researchers identified genetic links between COVID-19 and two obscure infections—glanders and Sennetsu fever—potentially rewriting the narrative of how the virus emerged. Unraveling the

While astronomers often set their sights on the stars, the landscapes surrounding their observatories can be just as awe-inspiring. Chile’s Atacama Desert, home to the world-renowned ALMA telescope, offers breathtaking sights both above and below. One such marvel is the ancient stone fortress of Pukará de Quitor, a relic of the Licán Antai people that

A new study identifies Florida spot keratopathy (FSK) as a stable, benign eye condition in pets and suggests a possible link to little fire ant exposure. Analyzing 100 cases, it also highlights previously unrecognized signs of eye irritation. A recent study from the Koret School of Veterinary Medicine at Hebrew University provides new insights into

A new quantum-classical approach speeds up the discovery of photochromic materials. A joint research team has developed an innovative quantum-classical computing approach to design photochromic materials—light-sensitive compounds—offering a powerful tool to accelerate material discovery. Their findings were published in Intelligent Computing. Building on their previous work in the same journal, the researchers introduced a computational-basis

Blue Ghost has left Earth’s orbit, carrying NASA’s science to the Moon. Instruments are performing well, including a radiation-hardened computer, a magnetic field detector, and a lunar soil collection system. The mission is a crucial step for future Artemis lunar explorations. Firefly’s Blue Ghost spacecraft, carrying NASA science and technology, has successfully left Earth’s orbit
Global warming is producing a rapid loss of plant species -- according to estimates, roughly 600 plant species have died out since 1750 -- twice the number of animal species lost. But which species are hit hardest? And how does altered biodiversity actually affect interactions between plants? Experts have tackled these questions and, in two recent studies, presented the answers they found buried in the past: using fragments of plant…
Climate scientists present a realistic supercomputer simulation that resolves the complex interactions between fire, vegetation, smoke and the atmosphere. The authors find that increasing greenhouse gas emissions will likely increase the global lightning frequency by about 1.6% per degree Celsius global warming, with regional hotspots in the eastern United States, Kenya, Uganda and Argentina. Locally this could intensify wildfire occurrences. However, the dominant drivers for the growing area burned by…
A new blood test has an 80% accuracy in predicting preterm preeclampsia, according to a new study. The condition, which results in over 70,000 maternal deaths and 500,000 fetal deaths each year worldwide, has long been hard to predict.
Scientists have developed new light-sensitive chemicals that can radically improve the treatment of aggressive cancers with minimal side effects. In mouse tests, the new therapy completely eradicated metastatic breast cancer tumors.
Answer seven questions and get an indication of how your relationship is right now. Just in time for Valentine's Day, researchers are publishing a new study that introduces a scientifically validated scale, the 'Valentine's Scale'. The scale measures how satisfied you are in your love relationship.
Qubits -- the fundamental units of quantum information -- drive entire tech sectors. Among them, superconducting qubits could be instrumental in building a large-scale quantum computer, but they rely on electrical signals and are difficult to scale. In a breakthrough, a team of physicists has achieved a fully optical readout of superconducting qubits, pushing the technology beyond its current limitations.
New research reports, for the first time, the widespread occurrence of biofluorescence in birds-of-paradise. The study, based on specimens collected since the 1800s, finds biofluorescence in 37 of the 45 known birds-of-paradise species and suggests that this special 'glow' is important among males for hierarchy and mating displays.
An international research team has gained new insights into the burial rituals of Late Ice Age societies in Central Europe. Signs of human remains from the Maszycka Cave in southern Poland being manipulated indicate systematic dissection of the deceased, as well as cannibalism.
In 2018, the side of the Anak Krakatau volcano collapsed in a powerful eruption and produced a tsunami that killed hundreds and injured thousands on nearby Java and Sumatra in Indonesia. A new analysis of satellite data showed the mountainside was slipping for years and accelerated before the eruption -- information that could have potentially offered a warning of the collapse.
Researchers have developed a new AI algorithm, called Torque Clustering, that significantly improves how AI systems independently learn and uncover patterns in data, without human guidance.
Entanglement -- linking distant particles or groups of particles so that one cannot be described without the other -- is at the core of the quantum revolution changing the face of modern technology. While entanglement has been demonstrated in very small particles, new research is thinking big, demonstrating high-fidelity entanglement between two acoustic wave resonators.
A study showed that chatbots alone outperformed doctors when making nuanced clinical decisions, but when supported by artificial intelligence, doctors performed as well as the chatbots.
Short snouts and a flat profile -- within a span of 100 years, humans have significantly changed the shape of the skulls of German domestic pigs. This is likely down to new breeding practices introduced at the beginning of the 20th century. The researchers analyzed 3D scans of 135 skulls of wild boars and domestic pigs from the early 20th and 21st centuries. Surprisingly, the same effects can even be…
Euclid, the European Space Agency's dark Universe detective, has made an astonishing discovery -- right in our cosmic backyard.
Years before tau tangles show up in brain scans of patients with Alzheimer's disease, a biomarker test can detect small amounts of the clumping-prone tau protein and its misfolded pathological forms that litter the brain, cerebrospinal fluid and potentially blood, new research suggests.
A revolutionary new treatment called Targeted Thermal Therapy (Tripel T) offers a safer, faster alternative to surgery for patients with high blood pressure caused by Primary Aldosteronism, a hormonal disorder.
Evolution is traditionally associated with a process of increasing complexity and gaining new genes. However, the explosion of the genomic era shows that gene loss and simplification is a much more frequent process in the evolution of species than previously thought, and may favor new biological adaptations that facilitate the survival of living organisms. This evolutionary driver, which seems counter-intuitive -- 'less is more' in genetic terms -- now reveals…
Earth's inner core is undergoing structural transformation. Located 3,000 miles below the Earth's surface, the inner core is anchored by gravity within the molten liquid outer core. Until now the inner core was widely thought of as a solid sphere. A new study indicates that the near surface of the inner core may undergo viscous deformation, changing its shape and shifting at the inner core's shallow boundary.
Findings suggest a safe, inexpensive, and effective pathway for allergists to treat children who already tolerate at least half a peanut.
Based on the current pledges of countries for limiting their emissions of greenhouse gases, global temperatures are projected to reach 2.7 degrees Celsius beyond pre-industrial levels by the end of this century. A new review paper highlights how this would dramatically reshape the Arctic, the fastest-warming region of Earth.
An international collaboration sheds new light on the relationship between quantum theory and thermodynamics. The research group demonstrated that while the laws of quantum theory alone do not inherently prevent violations of the second law of thermodynamics, any quantum process can be implemented without actually violating the law. This surprising result suggests a peaceful coexistence between quantum theory and thermodynamics, despite their logical independence. This discovery could have profound implications…
Researchers have analyzed the soft tissue from a fossilized plesiosaur for the first time. The results show that the long-necked marine reptile had both smooth and scaly skin. This was likely so it could both swim rapidly and move along rough seabeds.
'Temperamental' stars that brighten and dim over a matter of hours or days may be distorting our view of thousands of distant planets, suggests a new study.
New research finds some baleen whale species call at such deep frequencies that they're completely undetectable by killer whales, which cannot hear sounds below 100 hertz. These also tend to be the species of baleen whales that flee in the face of attack from killer whales.
Scientists have developed a novel tool designed to protect and conserve coral reefs by providing them with an abundance of feeding opportunities.
A biomaterial that can mimic certain behaviors within biological tissues could advance regenerative medicine, disease modeling, soft robotics and more, according to researchers.
Researchers have unveiled the precise brain mechanisms that enable animals to overcome instinctive fears. The study in mice could have implications for developing therapeutics for fear-related disorders such as phobias, anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
Electric sparks are used for welding, powering electronics, killing germs or for igniting the fuel in some car engines. Despite their usefulness, they are hard to control in open space, they split into chaotic branches that tend to go towards the closest metallic objects. A recent study uncovers a way of transporting electricity through air by ultrasonic waves. The level of control of the electric sparks allows to guide the…
A new study focusing on Enceladus, a moon of Saturn, shows that the physics of alien oceans could prevent evidence of deep-sea life from reaching places where we can detect it.
People's ability to interpret emotions or focus on performing a task is reduced by short-term exposure to particulate matter (PM) air pollution, potentially making everyday activities, such as the weekly supermarket shop, more challenging.
Astronomers have characterized the largest-ever early-Universe radio jet. Historically, such large radio jets have remained elusive in the distant Universe. With these observations, astronomers have valuable new insights into when the first jets formed in the Universe and how they impacted the evolution of galaxies.
Astronomers have succeeded in observing the magnetic field around a young star where planets are thought to be forming. The team was able to use dust to measure the three-dimensional structure 'fingerprint' of the magnetic field. This will help improve our understanding of planet formation.
An international team of scientists has tentatively found some of the earliest indications of alcoholic drink production in the Patos Lagoon region of Brazil. State-of-the-art analysis of pottery fragments showed traces of beverages made from vegetables, likely to have been tubers, sweetcorn, and palm.
Earliest inner solar system planetesimals shaped the inventory of moderately volatile elements in terrestrial planets.
Reducing sulphur in the air may inadvertently increase natural emissions of methane from wetlands such as peatlands and swamps, a new study has found. The resulting additional future release of 20-34 million tons of methane each year from natural wetlands would mean targets to reduce human-caused emissions need to be more stringent than currently set out in the Global Methane Pledge.
A new climate modeling study presents a new scenario of how climate and life on our planet would change in response to a potential future strike of a medium-sized (~500 m) asteroid.
There's a 26 per cent annual chance that space rocket junk will re-enter the atmosphere and pass through a busy flight area, according to a recent study. While the chance of debris hitting an aircraft is very low, the research highlights that the potential for uncontrolled space rocket junk to disrupt flights and create additional costs for airlines and passengers is not.
With bloated bellies and hairy legs, female flies try to look bigger to get food from courting mates. But male flies, in turn, have sharpened their eyesight to call their bluff. A new study suggests that this is an ongoing evolution where both sexes try to outsmart each other.
Students attending schools that ban the use of phones throughout the school day aren't necessarily experiencing better mental health and wellbeing, as the first worldwide study of its kind has found that just banning smartphones is not enough to tackle their negative impacts.
Boosting communication between the spinal nerves and the muscles using the spinal cord stimulation reverses spinal muscle atrophy (SMA) progression and could be applied to other motoneuron diseases, including ALS.
Body weight and body mass index alone are not enough to predict whether someone will develop a metabolic disease. A new atlas of cells in fat tissue could help to explain why some overweight people stay healthy, while others do not.
A researcher has discovered a new method to remove so-called 'forever chemicals' from our drinking water by heating the PFAS with granular activated carbon. The discovery represents a significant breakthrough in managing PFAS-containing solid wastes, biosolids and spent adsorbent media that are major concerns to farmers and communities.
Sixty-six million years ago, at the end of the Cretaceous Period, an asteroid impact near the Yucat n Peninsula of Mexico triggered the extinction of all known non-bird dinosaurs. But for the early ancestors of today's waterfowl, surviving that mass extinction event was like ... water off a duck's back. Location matters, as Antarctica may have served as a refuge, protected by its distance from the turmoil taking place elsewhere…
Newly discovered brain cells count each bite before sending the order to cease eating a meal.
Physicists measured how readily a current of electron pairs flows through 'magic-angle' graphene, a major step toward understanding how this unusual material superconducts. By determining how readily electron pairs flow through this material, scientists have taken a big step toward understanding its remarkable properties.
In a milestone that brings quantum computing tangibly closer to large-scale practical use, scientists have demonstrated the first instance of distributed quantum computing. Using a photonic network interface, they successfully linked two separate quantum processors to form a single, fully connected quantum computer, paving the way to tackling computational challenges previously out of reach.
Researchers report that all nine patients in a clinical trial being treated for stage III or IV clear cell renal cell carcinoma (a form of kidney cancer), generated a successful anti-cancer immune response after initiation of a personalized cancer vaccine.
Computer models reveal how human-driven climate change will dramatically overhaul critical nutrient cycles in the ocean. Researchers report evidence that marine nutrient cycles -- essential for sustaining ocean ecosystems -- are changing in unexpected ways as the planet continues to warm.
Photosynthesis -- mainly carried out by plants -- is based on a remarkably efficient energy conversion process. To generate chemical energy, sunlight must first be captured and transported further. This happens practically loss-free and extremely quickly. A new study shows that quantum mechanical effects play a key role in this process.
A daily intake of one gram of omega-3s can slow down biological aging by up to four months, according to an analysis of clinical data from the international DO-HEALTH study. For the first time, epigenetic clocks were used to measure the aging process.
Paleontologists have unearthed the fossilized remains of two Jurassic bird species at a locality in Zhenghe county, Fujian province, southeast China. The post New Fossils from China Fill Gap in Early Evolutionary History of Birds appeared first on Sci.News: Breaking Science News.
The Tarantula Nebula is the most important star-forming complex in the Local Group of galaxies, which includes the Milky Way, the Large Magellanic Cloud, and the Andromeda galaxy. The post Chandra Captures Deepest X-ray Image Ever Made of Tarantula Nebula appeared first on Sci.News: Breaking Science News.
Named SNR J0614-7251 and SNR J0624-6948, the newly-discovered supernova remnants reside in the outskirts of the Large Magellanic Cloud, the largest satellite galaxy of the Milky Way. The post XMM-Newton Spots Two Supernova Remnants in Outskirts of Milky Way’s Satellite Galaxy appeared first on Sci.News: Breaking Science News.
Dubbed KM3-230213A, the newly-detected neutrino carried an astonishing energy of 220 peta-electronvolts (PeV), making it one of the most powerful elementary particles ever detected. The post KM3NeT Telescope Detects Most Energetic Cosmic Neutrino Yet appeared first on Sci.News: Breaking Science News.
Astronomers have imaged planetesimal belts in 74 planetary systems as part of the REsolved ALMA and SMA Observations of Nearby Stars (REASONS) survey. The post Astronomers Discover Exocometary Belts around 74 Stars appeared first on Sci.News: Breaking Science News.
Ornithologists from the American Museum of Natural History and the University of Nebraska-Lincoln have found 37 of the 45 currently recognized species of birds-of-paradise are biofluorescent. The post 82% Species of Birds-of-Paradise are Biofluorescent, New Study Shows appeared first on Sci.News: Breaking Science News.
The metabolism of theanine -- a unique non-proteinogenic amino acid -- is a necessary biological process during the planting and production of tea (Camellia sinensis) that determines tea quality. The post New Study Provides Insights into Theanine Metabolism in Tea Plants appeared first on Sci.News: Breaking Science News.
A team of scientists has discovered an ‘unexpected’ accumulation of beryllium-10 -- a rare radionuclide produced by cosmic rays in the atmosphere -- in samples taken from the bottom of the Central and Northern Pacific. The post Researchers Discover Unusual Accumulation of Cosmogenic Beryllium in Pacific Ocean appeared first on Sci.News: Breaking Science News.
The candidate planetary system, detected with the microlensing method, is thought to move at least 540 km per second (1.2 million mph). The post Astronomers May Have Discovered Fastest-Moving Exoplanet System Ever Seen appeared first on Sci.News: Breaking Science News.
Geoscientists from the University of Southern California, Los Angeles, the Institute of Geology and Geophysics at the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Cornell University and the University of Utah say they have detected structural changes near the planet’s center. The post Surface of Earth’s Inner Core May Be Changing, Scientists Say appeared first on Sci.News: Breaking Science News.
Paleontologists have discovered a fragmentary skeleton of a new lambeosaurine hadrosaurid dinosaur in the Upper Cretaceous Dalangshan Formation of southern China. The post New Duck-Billed Dinosaur Unearthed in China appeared first on Sci.News: Breaking Science News.
Archaeologists with the Vejle Museums have unearthed a 1,600-year-old weapon offering at the site of Løsning Søndermark, Hedensted, Denmark. The post Fragments of Roman Helmet, Various Weapons Found in Denmark appeared first on Sci.News: Breaking Science News.
An Einstein ring (also known as an Einstein-Chwolson ring or Chwolson ring) is created as the light from distant objects, like galaxies, pass by an extremely large mass, like a galaxy cluster or a massive galaxy. The post Astronomers Discover Complete Einstein Ring around NGC 6505 appeared first on Sci.News: Breaking Science News.
Blue whales and other baleen whales, which filter seawater through their mouths to feed on small marine life, once teemed in Earth’s oceans. The post Trace Metals and Other Nutrients from Whale Feces Fertilized Ancient Oceans, New Study Confirms appeared first on Sci.News: Breaking Science News.
Astronomers using the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope have captured a striking image of a portion of the Tarantula Nebula, which is part of a dwarf galaxy called the Large Magellanic Cloud. The post Hubble Sees Swirling Clouds of Cosmic Gas and Dust in Tarantula Nebula appeared first on Sci.News: Breaking Science News.
Paleontologists have described a new species of the extant bee genus Leioproctus from a fossil specimen found in southern New Zealand. The post 14.6-Million-Year-Old Bee Fossil Found in New Zealand appeared first on Sci.News: Breaking Science News.
Paleontologists have examined a 183-million-year-old plesiosaur skeleton with well-preserved skin traces from around the tail and front flipper from the Early Jurassic Posidonia Shale of southern Germany. The post Some Plesiosaurs Had Smooth Skin on Their Body and Scales on Their Flippers appeared first on Sci.News: Breaking Science News.
Astronomers have captured a stunning image of the edge-on protoplanetary disk around the Herbig-Haro object HH 30, which is located in the dark cloud LDN 1551 in the Taurus Molecular Cloud. The post Webb Observes Mysterious Herbig-Haro Object in Taurus Molecular Cloud appeared first on Sci.News: Breaking Science News.
An international team of researchers has analyzed the groans, moans, whistles, barks, shrieks and squeaks in humpback whale song recordings collected over eight years in New Caledonia. The post Songs of Humpback Whales Show Human Language-Like Statistical Structure appeared first on Sci.News: Breaking Science News.
The newly-discovered radio jet spans an astonishing 215,000 light-years, and is associated with J1601+3102, an extremely radio-loud quasar that existed just 1.2 billion years after the Big Bang. The post Monster Two-Lobed Radio Jet Detected in Early Universe appeared first on Sci.News: Breaking Science News.
Russia is attacking Ukraine with Shahed-136-type drones every night now. Ukraine has put up additional air defences in
Nuclear bomb is a weapon that employs the energy from a nuclear reaction. Resulting radiation and the fallout
Russia’s main air-defence systems are S-300 and S-400. Those are expensive missile systems, capable of engaging all kinds
More accurately predicting periods of increased hurricane activity weeks in advance may become possible due to new research
Researchers at ETH Zurich and the Max Planck Institute for Intelligent Systems have developed a robotic leg with
AstraZeneca has entered into a collaboration with biotech firm Immunai Inc., investing $18 million to utilize Immunai’s advanced
Astronomy has always relied on light to convey information about the universe. But capturing photons — such as
Meta Platforms, formerly Facebook, showcased its new augmented reality (AR) glasses prototype, Orion, during its annual Connect conference.
Nebius Group, an Amsterdam-based tech company born from the division of assets previously owned by Russian technology giant
In the desert of Texas, an innovative construction project is unfolding—one that uses a crane-sized 3D printer to
PayPal Holdings announced a major development on Wednesday, allowing U.S. merchants to buy, hold, and sell cryptocurrency directly
Russia has covertly established a weapons program in China to create long-range attack drones for use in the
The Sukhoi Su-57 is a Russian fifth-generation fighter jet, built as a response to the American F-22 Raptor.
Alphabet’s Google is partnering with Volkswagen to provide cutting-edge artificial intelligence capabilities for an in-app assistant designed specifically
Stability AI, an emerging leader in artificial intelligence, announced on Tuesday that renowned filmmaker James Cameron, director of
Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian denies reports that Iran has transferred a large quantity of Fath 360 short-range ballistic
Russia has emerged as the primary foreign actor using artificial intelligence (AI) to sway the U.S. presidential election,
SpaceX CEO Elon Musk has announced plans to launch approximately five uncrewed Starship missions to Mars within the