Science News
Live Science Today: 'Hexagonal' diamonds and fish scale down
Live Science - 16 Mar 2026 12:36
Monday, March 16, 2026: Your daily shot of the biggest science stories making headlines.
Rare supernova from 10 billion years ago may reveal the secret of dark energy
Science Daily - 16 Mar 2026 23:48
Astronomers may have found an exciting new clue about dark energy-the mysterious force driving the universes accelerating expansion. They discovered an extraordinarily bright supernova from more than 10 billion years ago...
Digital Twin of a Cell Tracks Its Entire Life Cycle Down to the Nanoscale
Singularity Hub - 16 Mar 2026 23:20
The simulation encompasses nearly all of a cell's molecules over roughly two hours. The post Digital Twin of a Cell Tracks Its Entire Life Cycle Down to the Nanoscale appeared first on SingularityHub.
Cocktail Party Problem Decoded: Sound Location Is Key to Hearing in a Crowd
Neuroscience News - 16 Mar 2026 20:42
Researchers use computational models to prove that the brain solves the cocktail party problem through a simple but powerful neural "boost."
Scientists inject one tumor and watch cancer vanish across the body
Science Daily - 16 Mar 2026 20:18
A redesigned cancer immunotherapy is showing striking early results after decades of disappointment with similar drugs. Researchers engineered a more powerful CD40 agonist antibody and changed how its delivered-injecting...
Sound of Fear: A Direct Brain Shortcut for Scary Noises
Neuroscience News - 16 Mar 2026 19:27
A new study reveals the auditory shortcut that allows the human brain to process and respond to "scary" sounds before we even realize we've heard them.
Investigational Brain Implant Restores High-Speed Communication
Neuroscience News - 16 Mar 2026 19:13
A new brain-computer interface translates attempted finger movements into text, allowing individuals with paralysis to type with near-human accuracy.
A clear roadmap for engineering combs of light
Phys.org - 16 Mar 2026 18:50
Optical frequency combs-laser sources that emit evenly spaced colors of light-are foundational, ubiquitous tools for precision measurement, found in optical clocks, gas-sensing spectrometers, and instruments that detect ...
Common pesticide may more than double Parkinsons disease risk
Science Daily - 16 Mar 2026 18:49
A new UCLA Health study suggests that long-term exposure to the pesticide chlorpyrifos may dramatically raise the risk of Parkinsons disease. Researchers found that people living in areas with sustained exposure had more...
Laser-assisted electron scattering seen with circularly polarized light for the first time
Phys.org - 16 Mar 2026 18:20
Researchers from Tokyo Metropolitan University have succeeded in detecting laser-assisted electron scattering (LAES) using circularly polarized light for the first time. The use of circularly polarized light promises val...
'Super El Niño' could push global temperatures to unprecedented highs, forecasters say
Live Science - 16 Mar 2026 18:03
A "super El Niño" could emerge by the end of the 2026 hurricane season, with forecasters predicting that the ongoing La Niña is about to finish.
Not just spin-electron orbitals can provide new method for controlling magnetism
Phys.org - 16 Mar 2026 17:40
Research is actively underway to develop a "dream memory" that can reduce heat generation in smartphones and laptops while delivering faster performance and lower power consumption. Korean researchers propose a n...
Turning Plastic Bottles into Parkinsons Medication
Neuroscience News - 16 Mar 2026 17:21
Researchers have successfully turned discarded plastic bottles into L-DOPA, proving that plastic waste is a valuable resource for human health.
Acetylcholine Seizes Control of Serotonin Signaling
Neuroscience News - 16 Mar 2026 16:27
New research reveals how acetylcholine hijacks the serotonin system, potentially causing the chemical "overdrive" seen in OCD and depression.
Forget the multiverse. In the pluriverse, we create reality together
New Scientist - 16 Mar 2026 16:00
A radical idea that resolves many quantum paradoxes suggests there is no objective view of reality. How can the cosmos be stitched together from interlocking perspectives?
The asteroid Ryugu has all of the main ingredients for life
New Scientist - 16 Mar 2026 16:00
All five of the canonical nucleobases - the underpinnings of DNA, RNA and life on Earth - have been found in samples from the asteroid Ryugu
A single injection of mRNA-like treatment could help heart muscle heal after a heart attack in mice and pigs. Could it work in humans too?
Live Science - 16 Mar 2026 15:29
Researchers boosted levels of a heart-healing hormone in mice and pigs with a single injection of a new, experimental form of self-amplifying RNA that prolonged hormone synthesis for many weeks.
Why global warming is accelerating and what it means for the future
New Scientist - 16 Mar 2026 15:00
Scientists disagree whether human-made climate change or natural fluctuations are mostly to blame for worse-than-expected heat in recent years
AI is nearly exclusively designed by men - here's how to fix it
New Scientist - 16 Mar 2026 13:00
With the Trump administrations attacks on so-called woke AI it is becoming even harder to make the technology we use fairer and more diverse. Leading voices are speaking out, reports Catherine de Lange
The ancient Goths were an ethnically diverse group
New Scientist - 16 Mar 2026 12:00
Ancient DNA reveals that the Goths of eastern Europe, some of whom would ultimately sack the city of Rome, may have been a mix of peoples from three continents
Equestrian statue of Marcus Aurelius: The only surviving larger-than-life-size statue of a pagan Roman emperor - a rarity that Michelangelo refurbished
Live Science - 16 Mar 2026 10:00
The giant, one-of-a-kind statue of a Roman emperor on horseback depicts him addressing his troops.
What does it mean if the universe has extra dimensions?
New Scientist - 16 Mar 2026 09:00
Dimensions beyond the four were familiar with could solve a host of problems in physics and cosmology. Columnist Leah Crane explores what a higher-dimensional universe might be like - and how we could find out if we live...