Science News
Sodium Is Cheap, Abundant, and Now Powering Batteries That Could Rival Lithium
Singularity Hub - 30 May 2026 01:24
Sodium-ion batteries are rapidly gaining on lithium in consistency and fast charging. The post Sodium Is Cheap, Abundant, and Now Powering Batteries That Could Rival Lithium appeared first on SingularityHub.
Skeletal remains of Queen Elisenda, one of the most powerful rulers in medieval Europe, unearthed in Barcelona - along with several others who bore unexplained stab wounds
Live Science - 30 May 2026 00:20
In honor of the 700th-anniversary founding of the Royal Monastery of Santa Maria Pedralbes in Barcelona, scientists opened eight 14th-century graves and studied the 25 people found inside, including a queen.
A Biological Signature of Consciousness Found
Neuroscience News - 29 May 2026 22:53
By capturing these pristine intracranial signals, the study introduces an objective, measurable biomarker to optimize deep-brain therapies and revolutionize our clinical understanding of conscious states.
Scramblase CLPTM1L May Drive Glioblastoma
Neuroscience News - 29 May 2026 20:56
A new study identifies an endoplasmic reticulum-localized lipid scramblase called CLPTM1L as the primary master regulator behind lipid raft formation in glioblastoma.
Why Willpower Fails and How to Restore Focus
Neuroscience News - 29 May 2026 20:42
A new neurobiological framework reveals that the constant bombardment of digital notifications exploits our evolutionary dopamine pathways, making effortful focus increasingly difficult to sustain.
Unmasking the Epigenetic Disparity in Anxiety Disorders
Neuroscience News - 29 May 2026 20:23
Can we permanently dismantle post-traumatic stress disorder by erasing the physical marks trauma leaves on our genes? Backed by a five-year, $3.2 million grant researchers are exploring the epigenetic architecture of the...
Two Distinct Autism Subtypes Identified Via Brain Connectivity
Neuroscience News - 29 May 2026 18:49
A new study leverages a multi-site database of over 1,900 fMRI scans to isolate at least two distinct subtypes of autism defined by their brain connectivity.
Aim high but don't shoot for the moon, mathematicians advise
New Scientist - 29 May 2026 18:20
According to a mathematical model of how people weigh up different outcomes, the optimal strategy is to be ambitious, but not overly so
Tests that measure 'biological age' aren't helpful for tracking your health, scientists say
Live Science - 29 May 2026 18:00
Tests that measure biological aging are informative tools for studying large numbers of people but not for tracking individual health status.
The Brain Waste System Disrupted by Alzheimers Mapped
Neuroscience News - 29 May 2026 17:50
A new study leverages an elegant genetic engineering technique to track the exact routes metabolic debris uses to exit the central nervous system.
War has brought Iran's water crisis to a breaking point: 'Things will collapse unless there is meaningful structural change'
Live Science - 29 May 2026 17:39
Iran is experiencing "water bankruptcy" that stems from decades of broken water governance and aggressive policies, and the current war is exacerbating the crisis.
Diamond quantum sensor could reveal elusive altermagnets
Phys.org - 29 May 2026 17:20
For nearly a century, there were two known kinds of magnets. Ferromagnets are the classic magnets that attract metal and keep pictures stuck to the refrigerator. Antiferromagnets hide their magnetism at the atomic scale ...
OpenAI's internal AI model just solved an 80-year-old math problem - and mathematicians verified it
Live Science - 29 May 2026 17:16
The closest the field has come to solving the planar unit distance problem, first proposed in the 1940s, was in 1984. Now, OpenAI claims an internal model has cracked the puzzle.
Horror video game gets its creepiness from a quantum computer
New Scientist - 29 May 2026 16:00
Quantum Backrooms is a horror game in which the player explores eerie rooms. The twist is that the rooms have been generated by a quantum computer
IceCube detects break in cosmic neutrino spectrum, ruling out simple power-law model
Phys.org - 29 May 2026 15:20
A new study published in Physical Review Letters by the IceCube Collaboration reports evidence that the energy spectrum of astrophysical neutrinos is not a simple straight line.
We're becoming more individualistic and it's affecting our love lives
New Scientist - 29 May 2026 15:00
We're increasingly prioritising our own needs over those of the wider community, which may be causing us to love our partners less intensely
Mirror life: Scientists clash over threat of lab-engineered bacteria
New Scientist - 29 May 2026 15:00
Bacteria created using mirror images of natural biomolecules would pose a grave threat to life on Earth, some researchers warn, but a new study suggests they would struggle to survive in the wild
Antihydrogen mirrors hydrogen in upgraded spectrum test, narrowing cosmic mystery
Phys.org - 29 May 2026 15:00
University of Calgary researchers are a part of a group who just got one step closer to solving a mystery of the universe. Dr. Timothy Friesen, Ph.D., an associate professor of Physics and Astronomy in the Faculty of Sci...
Fingal's Cave: Scotland's 'cave of melody' where eerie echoes bounce off pillars of solidified lava
Live Science - 29 May 2026 14:00
Fingal's Cave is a hollow inside the Scottish island of Staffa that is characterized by massive, interlocking hexagonal columns of volcanic rock and astonishing acoustics.
'Very rough day': Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket explodes in gigantic fireball, days after being selected for NASA moon missions
Live Science - 29 May 2026 13:04
The rocket explosion, a contender for the largest in American history, is a significant setback for Jeff Bezos and NASA.
Protein traffic jams may explain aging, memory loss, and Alzheimers
Science Daily - 29 May 2026 12:17
Scientists at Stanford may have uncovered a hidden reason our brains decline with age. Studying the ultra-short-lived turquoise killifish, researchers discovered that the cellular machinery responsible for building prote...
Pancreatic cancer halted by virus injection in three patients
New Scientist - 29 May 2026 12:00
A cancer-killing virus has stopped pancreatic tumours from growing and spreading in three people in an initial safety trial, raising hopes that it may help to beat the deadly condition