Our skin’s epithelial cells send electrical signals like neurons to cry out for help
Briefing
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Blockbuster New Vera Rubin Observatory Will Change Astronomy Forever
The game-changing Vera Rubin Observatory will collect more astronomical data in its first year than all other telescopes combined
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Does this new tent repel both water and the laws of physics?
Feedback is tickled by a marketing email touting a new range of tents, which promises revolutionary waterproofing technology
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A woman's body is a man's world. Just ask an anatomist…
From Fallopian tubes to the G-spot, long-dead men have left their mark on women’s anatomy. It’s time to turf them out, says Adam Taor
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A compelling book asks if we are killing off the idea of private life
How did we lose the sense that some parts of life should be off-limits rather than open to commodification? Tiffany Jenkins’s thoughtful new book Strangers and Intimates explores
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Can any nation protect against a Ukraine-style drone smuggling attack?
Ukraine’s Operation Spiderweb showed how small, cheap drones can be smuggled into a country and used against expensive military hardware. Now, there are concerns that nations like the US and UK aren’t ready to defend against a similar attack
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Pincer plot twist: How female earwigs evolved deadly claws for love and war
Female earwigs may be evolving exaggerated weaponry just like males. A study from Toho University found that female forceps, once assumed to be passive tools, show the same kind of outsized growth linked to sexual selection as the male’s iconic pincers. This means that female earwigs might be fighting for mates too specifically for access to non-aggressive males challenging long-standing assumptions in evolutionary biology.
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Sun’s secret storms exposed: NASA's codex unveils a turbulent corona
NASA s CODEX experiment aboard the International Space Station is revealing the Sun like never before. Using advanced filters and a specialized coronagraph, CODEX has captured images showing that the solar wind streams of charged particles from the Sun is not a smooth, uniform flow but rather a turbulent, gusty outpouring of hot plasma. These groundbreaking observations will allow scientists to measure the speed and temperature of the solar wind with unprecedented detail, providing critical insights for space weather forecasting and understanding how solar activity impacts Earth and space technology.
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Scientists just took a big step toward the quantum internet
A team of Danish and German scientists has launched a major project to create new technology that could form the foundation of the future quantum internet. They re using a rare element called erbium along with silicon chips like the ones in our phones to produce special particles of light for ultra-secure communication and powerful computing. With cutting-edge tools like lasers and nanotech, the researchers are working to make something that didn t seem possible just a few years ago: light that can both travel long distances and remember information.
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Something more toxic than gators is hiding in the swamps
Mercury contamination is surfacing as a serious concern in parts of Georgia and South Carolina, particularly in regions like the Okefenokee Swamp. University of Georgia researchers found alarmingly high levels of the neurotoxic metal in alligators, especially in older individuals and even hatchlings suggesting the toxin is passed both up the food chain and through generations. These ancient reptiles act as environmental indicators, raising red flags for the broader ecosystem and potentially for humans who fish or hunt nearby.