Science News
A NASA satellite caught a giant tsunami doing something no one expected
Science Daily - 25 Jun 2026 01:22
A Pacific-wide tsunami triggered by a magnitude 8.8 Kamchatka earthquake gave scientists their first detailed satellite view of a major tsunami in motion. The observations revealed unexpected wave behavior and helped unc...
Pop Music Echoes a Growing Culture of Vices
Neuroscience News - 24 Jun 2026 22:43
An extensive computational analysis of over 380,000 songs spanning 1960 to 2023 has revealed that popular music lyrics have become increasingly negative, showcasing a steady historical decline in language related to mora...
Bodily Inflammation Shapes the Brain and Behavior
Neuroscience News - 24 Jun 2026 22:08
A new study reveals bodily inflammation alters brain function, driving the profound sickness behavior and depression experienced during both acute infections and chronic autoimmune diseases.
Possible signs of ancient life on Mars are rich in complex carbon
New Scientist - 24 Jun 2026 22:00
An instrument on the Perseverance rover has identified large, complex carbon compounds alongside unusual patterns on the surface of rocks that resemble traces of microbial activity
Body Clock Dictates Morning Calorie Burning
Neuroscience News - 24 Jun 2026 21:53
A new study has proven that the human endogenous circadian clock independently drives a 24-hour rhythm in diet-induced thermogenesis, causing calorie burning after meals to peak in the biological morning and hit its lowe...
Laser experiments push helium to record shock pressures
Phys.org - 24 Jun 2026 21:50
Deep inside gas giants like Jupiter and Saturn, hydrogen and helium coexist under pressures millions of times greater than Earth's atmosphere. Under those conditions, helium may separate from hydrogen and influence a...
How longer exciton lifetimes could ease efficiency trade-off in organic solar cells
Phys.org - 24 Jun 2026 21:40
Although the efficiency of organic solar cells has now risen to more than 20%, there are physical limits that make it difficult to further increase their performance. A research team from Linköping University in Sweden,...
Screwworm could be the first species targeted by an 'extinction drive'
New Scientist - 24 Jun 2026 21:19
We have developed genetic technologies that could wipe out entire species of pests that are harmful to us. Columnist Michael Le Page says the flesh-eating screwworm is the most likely first target
The Neural Architecture of Evolutionary Reversals
Neuroscience News - 24 Jun 2026 21:09
A functional whole-brain imaging study reveals that blind Mexican cavefish evolved an inverted behavioral response to light by repurposing existing neurons in the posterior tuberculum and modifying conserved dopamine pat...
A magnetic field that kills superconductivity can also bring it back
Phys.org - 24 Jun 2026 21:00
Magnetic fields are generally known to destroy superconductivity in a material. However, in exceptional cases, they can lead to what is known as "re-entrant superconductivity"-where superconductivity disappears a...
The best sci-fi novel in 2026 so far - plus 6 other great reads
New Scientist - 24 Jun 2026 21:00
Sci-fi columnist Emily H. Wilson rounds up her favourite reads of the year to date - and highlights one particular book as her top pick
The 17 best popular science books of 2026 so far
New Scientist - 24 Jun 2026 21:00
The first six months of the year have brought us popular science reads on everything from consciousness to cosmology. Liz Else rounds up her favourites
Neuroscience can't tell us the way to govern people's brains
New Scientist - 24 Jun 2026 21:00
From the age of legal adulthood to the concept of "profound autism", policy-makers are turning to neuroscience to help shape laws and policies, but the science simply isn't ready
Room-temperature laser hits record stability with 68-cm optical cavity
Phys.org - 24 Jun 2026 20:30
Scientists at NPL have demonstrated the best-reported laser frequency stability achieved with an optical reference cavity operating at room temperature, marking a major advance in ultrastable laser technology. The team...
New Platform Accelerates VR Cybersickness Research
Neuroscience News - 24 Jun 2026 19:40
A new study has bypassed traditional lab bottlenecks by collecting cybersickness data from 250 remote Meta Quest users in just 15 days, aiming for a 2,000-person cohort to map individual tracking differences.
Ultrafast X-rays allow researchers to 'watch' how molecules rearrange during a chemical reaction controlled by light
Phys.org - 24 Jun 2026 19:30
Since the 1980s, researchers have sought to use laser light to control chemical reactions relevant to photochemistry, catalysis and light-responsive materials. But this technique, known as coherent control, has a blind s...
Dogs May Bridge the Autism Drug Discovery Gap
Neuroscience News - 24 Jun 2026 19:19
Shank3 mutant laboratory Beagles could bridge the 90% failure gap in autism drug development, as their uniquely co-evolved social architecture allows them to mirror human-like social withdrawal, gaze aversion, and sensor...
Daytime Light Linked to Lower Dementia Risk
Neuroscience News - 24 Jun 2026 19:04
Average daytime light exposure above 1,000 lux reduces dementia risk by 16%, and that getting less than 42 minutes of bright daily light is a stronger predictor of dementia than six traditional clinical risk factors.
Water might secretly be a mix of 2 different liquids, scientists say
Live Science - 24 Jun 2026 19:04
For decades, scientists suspected water secretly behaves like two different liquids. A new AI-powered study has finally caught it happening at the molecular level.
All known Homo naledi skeletons seem to be female
New Scientist - 24 Jun 2026 19:00
An analysis of tooth proteins suggests all 23 Homo naledi individuals found in the Rising Star cave in South Africa were female, which strengthens the case that they were placed there deliberately
The lunar botanist with a plan to farm vegetables on the moon
New Scientist - 24 Jun 2026 19:00
Jessica Atkin knows more than anyone else about what it would take to supply food for a moon base. She reveals how to build a lunar farm and what astronauts can expect to dine on
Some of the last Neanderthals were surprisingly genetically diverse
New Scientist - 24 Jun 2026 19:00
Genetic analysis of Neanderthals in north-western Europe reveals that this population was surprisingly genetically diverse, hinting that inbreeding didnt lead to the species' demise