Earth
Some of 2025’s scientific discoveries broke records
Longest lightning, the first AI-generated genomes and biggest black hole smashup were among this year’s top science superlatives.
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Longest lightning, the first AI-generated genomes and biggest black hole smashup were among this year’s top science superlatives.
We summarize the week's scientific breakthroughs every Thursday.
Space is always inspiring and 2025 was no exception, with finding Betelgeuse’s buddy, debuting a prolific survey telescope and more.
Researchers are keeping an eye on the building-sized asteroid 2024 YR4, which has a 4 percent chance of hitting the moon seven years from now.
A massive collision between two asteroid-sized bodies around a nearby star offers a rare look at the violent process of planetary construction.
The Terra Hunting Experiment will track the wobbles of dozens of stars nightly for years in the most focused hunt yet for an Earth twin.
A mysterious excess of far-ultraviolet light seen across the Milky Way could come from the annihilation of clumpy dark matter.
The tiny pantheon known as the Asgard archaea bear traits that hint at how plants, animals and fungi emerged on Earth.
A microphone on NASA’s Perseverance rover recorded the sounds of electrical discharges generated by dusty gusts.
Simulations show that subsurface oceans on small moons may hit boiling conditions, potentially creating features like Miranda’s distinctive ridges.
Funding uncertainties are pushing U.S. space scientists out of the field and putting existing and future space missions on the chopping block.
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