Science News
MLB swing-tracking data helps researchers examine baseball's long-debated two-strike approach
Phys.org - 9 Jun 2026 00:40
When baseball fans watch a batter strike out with runners in scoring position, the reaction is often immediate: Shorten the swing. Put the ball in play. Stop swinging for the fences, they lament.
Orbital Airbag Could Shield Earth From Devastating Solar Storms
Singularity Hub - 8 Jun 2026 23:56
A planetary defense system would blunt solar storms with hundreds of tons of gas. Emerging heavy-lift rockets could deploy it in under two months. The post Orbital Airbag Could Shield Earth From Devastating Solar Storms ...
Planet nine mystery deepens as new discovery challenges hidden planet theory
Science Daily - 8 Jun 2026 23:52
Astronomers have spent years searching for a possible hidden giant planet far beyond Neptune. Unusual orbits among distant Kuiper Belt objects have fueled the Planet Nine theory, but recent discoveries are challenging th...
Fathers Pre-Conception Drinking Damages Offspring Mitochondria
Neuroscience News - 8 Jun 2026 21:50
A new study investigates how paternal alcohol exposure triggers transgenerational chronic disease.
NASA updates worsening ISS leak after crew safety alert
Science Daily - 8 Jun 2026 21:47
NASA says a long-running air leak aboard the ISS recently worsened, leading engineers to investigate new suspected crack locations and consider a riskier repair strategy. Astronauts were temporarily moved into a safe hav...
Scientists found a new Alzheimers trigger and a drug that stops it
Science Daily - 8 Jun 2026 21:23
Researchers have identified a new Alzheimers target and created an experimental compound that blocks a damaging process inside brain cells. In mice, the treatment slowed nerve cell loss, reduced Alzheimers-related change...
Disrupting Cancer Drugs Cognitive Decline Loop
Neuroscience News - 8 Jun 2026 21:18
A new study demonstrates that the estrogen prodrug DHED protects memory and sleep without risking cancer recurrence.
You don't need to worry about recursive-self-improving AI - yet
New Scientist - 8 Jun 2026 21:14
Anthropic has warned that recursive-self-improving AI could be on the horizon, but the truth is the company is more immediately concerned with marketing itself for a blockbuster initial public offering on the stock marke...
Partial Binding Locks Brains Common Kainate Receptor Open
Neuroscience News - 8 Jun 2026 21:02
A new study untangles the gating mechanics of the GluK2/GluK5 kainate receptor, the most common kainate receptor in the human brain.
What is anormalmemory slowdown, and when should I worry?
New Scientist - 8 Jun 2026 21:00
Lapses in memory are a normal part of ageing but can also be signs of dementia. Heres how to distinguish between typical brain ageing and cognitive decline
Wildlife thrives in solar farm built on restored peatland
New Scientist - 8 Jun 2026 21:00
A diverse range of bird species has been recorded at a solar park on rewetted peatland in Germany, suggesting that combining energy generation with habitat restoration could benefit biodiversity, the climate and the econ...
Cloud-tested quantum noise model predicts superconducting qubit errors with sevenfold better accuracy
Phys.org - 8 Jun 2026 21:00
Researchers from the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in Laurel, Maryland, and Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore have developed a practical, comprehensive noise-modeling framework for a popular class of...
Can Apple and Google stop children from sharing explicit images?
New Scientist - 8 Jun 2026 20:02
UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer has warned tech firms, including Apple and Google, that they must voluntarily implement tools to stop children sharing explicit images, but experts warn this is easier said than done
Why this $10 spectrometer chip could bring real-time chemical sensing to wearables
Phys.org - 8 Jun 2026 19:40
Researchers from the University of Cambridge and GlitterinTech, a startup founded by the same research group, have unveiled a fundamentally new type of optical spectrometer that delivers laboratory-grade precision in a d...
Brain Stimulation Offsets Sleep Deprivation Memory Loss
Neuroscience News - 8 Jun 2026 19:35
Inducing local, sleep-like neural activity in awake mice can completely offset the cognitive damage of sleep deprivation.
Genetic Brake Pathway Determines Vulnerability to Cocaine
Neuroscience News - 8 Jun 2026 19:22
A new study identifies a heritable brain pathway that dictates an individual's sensitivity to the unpleasant aftereffects of cocaine.
New cryogenic silicon carbide hardware addresses quantum computing bottleneck
Phys.org - 8 Jun 2026 19:10
Researchers from the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering in the Faculty of Engineering at the University of Hong Kong (HKU) and the Centre for Advanced Semiconductors and Integrated Circuits (CASIC) have ac...
New Compound Blocks Nerve Cell Death in Alzheimers
Neuroscience News - 8 Jun 2026 19:04
A new study introduces "Compound 10" as a novel therapeutic agent designed to preserve neural energy networks.
Thanks to natural selection, Indigenous Andeans may digest potatoes better than anyone else in the world, study finds
Live Science - 8 Jun 2026 18:54
After domesticating potatoes 10,000 years ago, the ancient people of the Andes evolved to have more copies of a key gene involved in digesting starch.
Preschool Outdoor Play Protects Childhood Mental Health
Neuroscience News - 8 Jun 2026 18:29
The findings show that each additional day per week a child plays outdoors between ages two and four increases their odds of remaining in a healthy, low-symptom category through age eight by 6% to 14%, reducing both inte...
'A disease anywhere can be a disease everywhere tomorrow morning': Public health expert on Ebola and the threat of future outbreaks
Live Science - 8 Jun 2026 18:17
Live Science spoke with Dr. Ali S. Khan, an epidemiologist and former assistant surgeon general of the U.S. Public Health Service, about the ongoing Ebola epidemic and the U.S.'s preparedness for future outbreaks.
Sea ice loss in the Arctic has triggered a critical tipping point that's destroying the food chain
Live Science - 8 Jun 2026 18:16
Researchers say the Arctic Ocean crossed a biological tipping point in 2009, when nitrate levels in the water suddenly started dropping due to a drastic reduction in sea ice extent.