Science News
Baffling new snake species in Myanmar looks like multiple species at once
Science Daily - 22 Apr 2026 01:51
Scientists have uncovered a fascinating new species of pit viper in Myanmar that seems to blur the very definition of what a species is. This snake, now named the Ayeyarwady pit viper, puzzled researchers because it look...
AI Identifies Appendix Removal and Diet as Alzheimers Risks
Neuroscience News - 21 Apr 2026 23:37
A massive AI study identifies appendix removal and long-term gut microbiome disruption as key drivers of Alzheimers risk.
Q&A: IceCube Observatory upgrades improve search for elusive cosmic messenger
Phys.org - 21 Apr 2026 23:00
Buried within the Antarctic ice are more than 5,000 light sensors that work together to detect some of the highest energy particles in the universe. These tiny particles, called neutrinos, provide insight into the extrem...
Scientists Revive Failing Cells With Mitochondria Transplants
Singularity Hub - 21 Apr 2026 22:08
A new tool that tethers healthy mitochondria to ailing cells has shown promise in mice with inherited blindness. The post Scientists Revive Failing Cells With Mitochondria Transplants appeared first on SingularityHub.
Midlife Hobbies Outperform Genetic Alzheimers Risk
Neuroscience News - 21 Apr 2026 21:37
A 10-year longitudinal study finds that diverse lifestyle activities in midlife are more powerful than the APOE 4 gene in shaping cognitive health.
Redefining Neuroplasticity Through Selective Deactivation
Neuroscience News - 21 Apr 2026 20:57
A new study finds that the auditory cortex in deaf individuals uses selective deactivation to represent visual spatial features.
NASA shuts off another Voyager 1 instrument as humanity's most distant spacecraft prepares for risky 'Big Bang' maneuver to save power
Live Science - 21 Apr 2026 20:40
After nearly 50 years in space, the two Voyager spacecraft are very low on nuclear power. Voyager 1 just shut off another instrument to save the mission.
Titans strange plains may be explained by unusual weather
New Scientist - 21 Apr 2026 20:00
Most of Titans surface is oddly flat and smooth, and it may be because it is coated by as much as a metre of fluffy organic material that snowed down from the icy moons thick atmosphere
Scientists take a step toward a quantum internet using New York City's fiber
Phys.org - 21 Apr 2026 20:00
As long as there's been an internet, there's been a way to hack it. Scientists have spent decades imagining a different kind of network, one where the laws of physics make eavesdropping physically impossible, not...
Photonic chip generates milliwatt-level UV light, 100 times brighter than before
Phys.org - 21 Apr 2026 19:40
Researchers from the University of Twente and Harvard University have developed a new way to generate ultraviolet (UV) light on a photonic chip at power levels high enough for real-world use. For the first time, the tech...
Your phone's next speed boost may come from a strange magnetic jump that rewrites how chips handle heat
Phys.org - 21 Apr 2026 19:10
A new technology has been proposed that could fundamentally solve the issue of smartphones overheating during high-spec gaming or extended video streaming. Researchers at KAIST have discovered the principle of processing...
AI Voices Outperform Human Speech in Noisy Environments
Neuroscience News - 21 Apr 2026 19:09
A study reveals that AI voice clones are up to 20% easier to understand than human voices in noisy environments, suggesting AI "idealizes" speech for better clarity.
How we discovered the speed limit of arithmetic - and broke it
New Scientist - 21 Apr 2026 19:00
Some seemingly simple sequences of multiplication and addition grow so quickly that they question the very foundations of mathematics. In doing so, they demand a whole new level of logic
Alzheimers Brains Share a Genetic Signature with Some Cancers
Neuroscience News - 21 Apr 2026 18:45
A study finds that Alzheimers is driven by cancer-like mutations in the brain's immune cells, which may enter from the blood and trigger lethal brain inflammation.
Game theory explains why the US's goals in Iran keep changing
New Scientist - 21 Apr 2026 17:57
The ongoing conflict around the Strait of Hormuz has become a situation in game theory known as a war of attrition. The maths behind it can help explain what's going on, says Petros Sekeris
Florida is facing its most intense drought in 15 years. Here's how it got so bad and how long it will last.
Live Science - 21 Apr 2026 17:33
More than 70% of the state is under "extreme" to "exceptional" drought conditions, and other parts of the U.S. Southeast are similarly affected. But why, and what are the impacts?
Neanderthal toddlers grew faster than modern humans, probably because of the harsh environment they evolved in
Live Science - 21 Apr 2026 17:10
A new study of a Neanderthal toddler reveals that our closest evolutionary relatives' growth patterns differed from those of modern humans.
'Nations need to prepare now': Key Atlantic ocean current is much closer to collapse than scientists thought
Live Science - 21 Apr 2026 16:46
An alarming study claims the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation is weakening more than believed previously. But experts say its findings are far from the final word.
ATLAS acts as a cosmic-ray laboratory with first measurement of proton-oxygen collisions
Phys.org - 21 Apr 2026 16:40
Tens of kilometers above Earth's surface, high-energy particles from outer space constantly strike the atmosphere, creating showers of energetic secondary particles that rain down from the sky. Approximately one of t...
Alternating atomic layers enable rare electron pairing mechanism in new unconventional superconductor
Phys.org - 21 Apr 2026 13:20
Superconductors, materials that can conduct electricity with a resistance of zero, have proved to be highly promising for the development of quantum technologies, medical imaging devices, particle accelerators and other ...
Scientists just captured trees glowing with electricity during storms
Science Daily - 21 Apr 2026 12:59
Scientists chasing thunderstorms in a retrofitted minivan finally captured something never seen before in nature: faint electrical glows shimmering from treetops during a storm. These corona discharges, long suspected bu...
Stretching and squeezing diamond opens new path for ultra-precise quantum sensors
Phys.org - 21 Apr 2026 12:40
Researchers have discovered a new way to tune the quantum properties of tiny defects in diamond-by gently stretching or compressing the crystal. These findings could pave the way for next-generation sensors that can dete...