Science News
Harvard scientists turn a silicon chip into a DNA writing machine
Science Daily - 9 Jul 2026 00:48
Scientists have created a silicon chip that can write dozens of DNA sequences simultaneously using electricity and water-based enzymes, offering a cleaner alternative to conventional DNA manufacturing. The breakthrough c...
Tiny silica particles wiped out aggressive prostate cancer in mice
Science Daily - 9 Jul 2026 00:18
Tiny silica nanoparticles engineered to seek out prostate cancer caused tumor cells to self-destruct and supercharged the immune system in preclinical mouse studies. Combined with immunotherapy, the treatment produced co...
Alcohol Alters Brain Flexibility Based on Hidden Dementia Markings
Neuroscience News - 8 Jul 2026 23:58
Alcohol interacts differently with amyloid-beta and tau pathologies in the brain's corticostriatal circuit.
Ketogenic Diet Eases Schizophrenia and Bipolar Symptoms
Neuroscience News - 8 Jul 2026 23:13
The ketogenic diet is a highly feasible, safe, and potentially transformative intervention for serious mental illness.
Heidelberg physicists just united two opposing quantum theories
Science Daily - 8 Jul 2026 22:15
A new quantum theory bridges two rival models of how impurities behave inside many-particle systems, resolving a problem that has challenged physicists for decades. The findings could reshape experiments on ultracold ato...
Seeding clouds with seawater could prevent a super El Niño
New Scientist - 8 Jul 2026 22:00
A modelling study suggests marine cloud brightening could shade the eastern Pacific and reduce a global temperature spike from El Niño, but there could be unexpected consequences
Tears Can Be Used to Detect Dopamine Levels
Neuroscience News - 8 Jul 2026 21:12
A new study introduces a low-cost, laser-induced graphene electrochemical sensor designed to detect dopamine levels in human tears.
This book is essential reading before watching the new Odyssey film
New Scientist - 8 Jul 2026 21:00
Homer still matters, argues Adam Nicolson in The Mighty Dead, a great primer to Christopher Nolan's new adaptation of the Odyssey, says Kelsey Hayes
Rare goblin shark filmed alive for the first time in the deep sea
Science Daily - 8 Jul 2026 21:00
For the first time, researchers have filmed the elusive goblin shark alive in the deep ocean where it naturally lives. The remarkable sightings greatly expand the shark's known range and depth, showing that this 125-...
A surprisingly detailed look at the physics of a lugworm's poop
New Scientist - 8 Jul 2026 21:00
Feedback is delighted by a study of how many animals produce poop that echoes the look of the poop emoji - even the lugworm, which does it upside down
The 5 must-watch science shows of 2026 so far
New Scientist - 8 Jul 2026 21:00
From AI with Hannah Fry to David Attenborough's early days, these are the five must-watch science documentaries of the year to date, says Bethan Ackerley
The 4 best science-fiction shows of 2026 so far
New Scientist - 8 Jul 2026 21:00
The first six months of 2026 have seen bright threads in sci- fi series including Fallout and Paradise. But for pure gold, advises TV columnist Bethan Ackerley, try Star City
Air Pollution Drives Parkinsons Risk
Neuroscience News - 8 Jul 2026 20:33
A new study establishes a robust link between long-term air pollution exposure and Parkinsons disease risk.
The Branching Dendrite Secret Behind Human Cognitive Superiority
Neuroscience News - 8 Jul 2026 20:17
A new study demonstrates that individual human cortical neurons possess the computational complexity of an entire deep artificial neural network.
Our fertility window could be extended by making ovaries softer
New Scientist - 8 Jul 2026 20:00
A drug that softens the ovaries helped mice and rats conceive more easily at an older age, and produce more pups
Scientists finally crack nature's secret for building better cancer drugs
Science Daily - 8 Jul 2026 19:28
Researchers have cracked the code behind bacteria's ability to naturally manufacture multiple versions of powerful anti-cancer drugs. The discovery could make it much easier to engineer new cancer treatments inspired...
We remember little to nothing of early childhood - and a recent mouse study may help explain why
Live Science - 8 Jul 2026 19:10
Early in life, neural networks in the brain's memory center are highly connected, and they are only later refined into precise systems, a mouse study finds.
Occams razor has lost its edge. Can we sharpen our search for truth?
New Scientist - 8 Jul 2026 19:00
Seeking out the simplest, most elegant explanations has served scientists well for centuries, but cognitive scientist Marina Dubovas experiments are revealing better ways to uncover reality
X-pinch plasma achieves radial proton acceleration for crisp imaging
Phys.org - 8 Jul 2026 19:00
Plasma pinches: From pursuits of nuclear fusion to an attractive point source of accelerated protons for proton radiography.
Secretive Chinese probe snaps first photo of Earth's mysterious 'quasi-moon' - and it may pose a big problem
Live Science - 8 Jul 2026 17:54
China's Tianwen-2 spacecraft has captured the first close-up photo of one of Earth's "quasi-moons," Kamo'oalewa. However, the image and the timing of its release suggest that it may be harder for the ...
Why Schrödinger's 1944 classic What Is Life? still feels prescient
New Scientist - 8 Jul 2026 16:00
Pioneer of quantum mechanics Erwin Schrödinger's look at living organisms is one of the most influential popular-science books of the 20th century. So how does it hold up today, asks Karmela Padavic-Callaghan
Lambs born via IVF using highly immature eggs in major breakthrough
New Scientist - 8 Jul 2026 14:28
Lambs have been born using an experimental form of IVF that coaxes immature eggs to become mature ones. This could boost the number of eggs available for fertilisation and improve IVF success rates