Science News


Dolphins Pacific White Orcas Whales British Columbia Killer
- What would you do if you were a hungry Pacific white-sided dolphin, salivating at the idea of sampling some salmon but resigned to the fact that the fish is too large to capture and swallow whole? You might, scientists say, team up with a killer ... [Read More]


Heat Plants Cones Beetles Cycads Beetle
- Follow Earth on Google Long before flowers flashed bright colors or released sweet scents, plants were already sending signals to their pollinators. They weren't visual or chemical. It was heat. New research shows that cycads – some of the ... [Read More]

Source: earth.com

Atmosphere Planet Star Planets James Webb Statement
- It's quick and easy to access Live Science Plus, simply enter your email below. We'll send you a confirmation and sign you up for our daily newsletter, keeping you up to date with the latest science news. James Webb finds a hot planet that is ... [Read More]


Earth Mars Clocks Gravity Clock Surface
- You know how it goes: You're trying to get some shut-eye in your bunk after a long shift of scraping samples of prebiotic material from red rocks in Utopia Planitia, and before you know it, your alarm bell rings. And then you see it woke you up a ... [Read More]


Hole Winds Space Black Hole Camille Diez Second
- It's quick and easy to access Live Science Plus, simply enter your email below. We'll send you a confirmation and sign you up for our daily newsletter, keeping you up to date with the latest science news. Astronomers have spotted a supermassive black hole whipping up cosmic winds at record speeds. The black hole, located 135 million light-years from Earth in the center of the NGC 3783 spiral galaxy, caught researchers' attention after emitting a huge X-ray flare. As the burst died down, it left winds of more than 37,000 miles per second (60,000 kilometers per second) — one-fifth the ... [Read More]


Quantum Computing Ionq Stock Years Quantum Computer
- Quantum computing investing has taken a step back since the market became a bit more risk-averse in October. Several quantum computing stocks have plunged from their all-time highs, including one of my favorites: IonQ . It was recently down around ... [Read More]

Source: fool.com

Species Shark Sharks Rays Trade Populations
- The world's oceans are home to an exquisite variety of sharks and rays, from the largest fishes in the sea – the majestic whale shark and manta rays – to the luminescent but rarely seen deep-water lantern shark and guitarfishes . The ... [Read More]


Therapy Proton Proton Therapy Radiation Patients Study
- A new study published today in The Lancet showed a significant survival benefit for patients with oropharyngeal cancers who were treated with proton therapy (IMPT) compared to those treated with traditional radiation therapy (IMRT). The study, led ... [Read More]


- Scientists say bears in southern Greenland differ genetically to those in the north, suggesting they could adjust Changes in polar bear DNA that could help the animals adapt to warmer climates have been detected by researchers, in a study thought ... [Read More]


Uk Quantum Computing Researchers Quantum Google Tech
- Google has announced plans to team up with the UK to invite researchers to come up with uses for the tech giant's state-of-the-art quantum chip Willow. It is one of several firms competing to develop a powerful quantum computer - which is seen as an exciting new frontier in the future of computing. Researchers hope they will be able to crack problems in fields such as chemistry and medicine which are impossible for current computers to solve. Professor Paul Stevenson of the University of Surrey - who had no involvement with the agreement - told the BBC it was "great news for UK researchers". ... [Read More]

Source: bbc.com

Stars Nitrogen Holes Years Monster Universe
- Follow Earth on Google Stars have long raised big questions for astronomers, especially when they look at some of the brightest objects in space and wonder how they formed so fast. These objects are quasars, powered by supermassive black holes that ... [Read More]

Source: earth.com

Reproduction Life Lifespan Survival Castration Females
- Cutting off reproduction — from birth control to castration — consistently adds years to life across species, even humans. If you've ever joked that dating is killing you, science may have just backed you up. According to a massive new ... [Read More]


Gale Crater Moon Layers Mars Moons Study
- Regular, alternating layers in Gale Crater may have been deposited as the result of tides raised by a moon at least 18 times the mass of Phobos, a study says. Thin layers of sedimentary rock in Mars's Gale Crater suggest that the planet once had a ... [Read More]


Neutrino Neutrinos Microboone Physicists Flavor Sterile Neutrinos
- There's a less than 5 percent chance that earlier anomalies can be explained by fourth neutrino "flavor." Since the 1990s, physicists have pondered the tantalizing possibility of an exotic fourth type of neutrino, dubbed the "sterile" neutrino, ... [Read More]


Reefs Coral Reef Coral Reefs Resilience Study
- Follow Earth on Google Coral reefs are under relentless strain. Warming seas, polluted runoff, and heavy fishing are steadily chipping away at their resilience. Coral reefs are undeniably struggling, yet the ways they react and adapt as a connected community remain unexpectedly complex. A new study brings that complexity into view and hints at a strategy that could support their long-term resilience. Advantages for connected reefs Reefs aren't isolated. They exchange larvae , support nearby ecosystems, and move in step as conditions shift. That basic idea becomes striking once you realize ... [Read More]

Source: earth.com

Rivers Mars Systems Water Tectonics Life
- Mars lacks the plate tectonics that drive Earth's river systems, yet it once hosted massive waterways. We've known for a while that Mars was once a wet world. But there's always been a geological puzzle regarding how and where that water moved. On Earth, rivers are largely driven by plate tectonics. The shifting of our planet's crust builds mountains and basins, creating the slopes necessary for water to flow. Mars, however, never had an active tectonic system like ours. Yet, even without it, the Red Planet managed to sustain impressive waterways. A new study reveals that ancient Martian ... [Read More]


Quantum Quantum Computing Chip Qubits Quantware Architecture
- It's quick and easy to access Live Science Plus, simply enter your email below. We'll send you a confirmation and sign you up for our daily newsletter, keeping you up to date with the latest science news. Scientists say they've developed a breakthrough 3D wiring solution that allows a 100-fold increase in the number of quantum bits (qubits) a quantum computing chip can support. Typical quantum computing processors (QPUs) are built with two-dimensional, horizontal wiring, just like the central processing units (CPUs) in our classical devices. But this traditional wiring limits the number of ... [Read More]


Sodium Salt Animals Plants Plant Herbivores
- Follow Earth on Google Across multiple sites in sub-Saharan Africa, researchers have identified a relationship between large herbivores and the amount of sodium available in local plants. According to the study, plant sodium availability spans a 1,000-fold range across sub-Saharan Africa for large herbivores such as elephants, giraffes, rhinos. The team compared plant sodium levels with animal counts and with results of fecal analyses. When plants run low, the largest herbivores face shortages that can influence habitat choice and risky travel routes. Salt shapes diet needs of animals Sodium ... [Read More]

Source: earth.com

Comet Atlas 3i 3i Atlas Life Earth
- Back in the summer this year, scientists were studying unusual objects hovering around Earth. ATLAS, one of the telescopes in NASA's planetary defense network, displayed something that left them scratching their heads. When they first spotted it, the  mysterious interstellar comet was travelling at about 137,000 miles per hour. After getting pulled by Sun's gravity, in October, it sped up at 153,000 miles per hour. Eventually, they realized that the comet, named 3I/ATLAS , was too fast to be bound by the Sun's gravity, and it seemed that it was just passing through our solar system, ... [Read More]


Nya L Ouml D Ouml Se Century L Ouml D Ouml Se Obrink Town Nya
- You can now listen to Fox News articles! Swedish archaeologists recently uncovered remnants of a forgotten 16th-century city beneath modern-day Gothenburg. The excavation was conducted by Arkeologerna, a Swedish archaeological consultancy, earlier this autumn. Researchers focused on Olskroken, a district east of central Gothenburg — Sweden's second-largest city after Stockholm. What they found were the remnants of a place called Nya Lödöse, a short-lived town founded by Swedish regent Sten Sture the Elder in 1473. With its strategic location near the North Sea, Nya ... [Read More]

Source: foxnews.com