All Stories

  1. Astronomy

    This is the first close-up image of a star beyond our galaxy

    The first-ever close-up of an extragalactic star looks different than expected and might give a view of what stars look like at the end of their lives.

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  2. Planetary Science

    Mars’ potato-shaped moons could be the remains of a shredded asteroid

    Phobos and Deimos could have formed from asteroid debris, a new study suggests. An upcoming sample return mission will help test the idea.

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  3. Artificial Intelligence

    Here’s why turning to AI to train future AIs may be a bad idea

    If future AI models are trained on AI-generated content, they could end up producing more bias and nonsense, researchers caution.

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  4. Climate

    Climate change has amped up hurricane wind speeds by 29 kph on average

    Every single Atlantic hurricane in 2024 had wind speeds supercharged by warming seas. One even jumped two categories of intensity.

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  5. Cosmology

    Einstein’s gravity endures despite a dark energy puzzle 

    The DESI project previously reported that dark energy — long thought to be constant — changes over time. A new analysis reaffirms that claim.

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  6. Health & Medicine

    Vaccines, fluoride, raw milk: How RFK Jr.’s views may shape public health

    If confirmed as head of the Department of Health and Human Services, Kennedy could influence U.S. policy on vaccines, drugs and food safety.

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  7. Life

    Nature’s first fiber optics could light the way to internet innovation

    Mineral crystals in heart cockles’ shells protect symbiotic algae from ultraviolet rays and could lead to innovations in internet infrastructure.

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  8. Health & Medicine

    Youth tobacco use has gone down, but the work isn’t over

    In 2024, tobacco use among middle and high school students reached a record low, but new vapes and other products with nicotine keep coming.

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  9. Health & Medicine

    Keeping weight off may be stymied by fat cells’ ‘memory’ of obesity

    Some genetic changes in fat cells don’t go away after weight loss, a study in mice and human cells suggests.

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  10. Neuroscience

    Some people don’t have a mind’s eye. Scientists want to know why

    The senses of sight and sound are usually mingled in the brain, but not for people with aphantasia.

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  11. Readers ask about self-correcting quantum computers, oobleck’s experimental value

    Readers wondered if mayo qualifies as a non-Newtonian fluid, and X user @Lightning456243 asked how a quantum computer can identify its own errors.

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  12. 50 years on, Lucy still sparks our curiosity

    Editor in chief Nancy Shute recounts the 50-year anniversary of the hominid's discovery, which upended the study of human evolution.

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