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Science - Page 36

SpaceX national security mission marks last use of Cape Canaveral's landing zones
2025-12-10

SpaceX national security mission marks last use of Cape Canaveral's landing zones

SpaceX sent up its second launch in less than 24 hours on the Space Coast on Dec. 9, while also bringing home its booster for the last time on a landing zone it has been leasing for the last 10 years.

New study gives the aged care industry insights about enduring impact of childhood institutionalization
2025-12-10

New study gives the aged care industry insights about enduring impact of childhood institutionalization

New research has given policymakers and aged care providers first-hand insights about how to uphold dignity and meet the unique needs of Forgotten Australians.

Quantum clues to consciousness: New research suggests the brain may harness the zero-point field
2025-12-10

Quantum clues to consciousness: New research suggests the brain may harness the zero-point field

What if your conscious experiences were not just the chatter of neurons, but were connected to the hum of the universe? In a paper published in Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, I present new evidence indicating that conscious states may arise from the brain's capacity to resonate with the quantum vacuum—the zero-point field that permeates all of space.

Ancient supernova may hold key to universe's mysterious dark energy
2025-12-10

Ancient supernova may hold key to universe's mysterious dark energy

Astronomers are a step closer to cracking one of the secrets of dark energy—the mysterious force believed to be causing the universe's accelerated expansion.

UH Moment: University of Houston Scientists Learn that Rare Bacterium ‘Plays Dead’ to Survive
2025-12-10

UH Moment: University of Houston Scientists Learn that Rare Bacterium ‘Plays Dead’ to Survive

University of Houston microbiologists discovered that a rare bacterium in NASA clean rooms can “play dead” to survive extreme sterilization conditions.

Cake-pan telescope searches the sky for fast radio bursts
2025-12-10

Cake-pan telescope searches the sky for fast radio bursts

The Global Radio Explorer telescope is a series of eight terminals being built and tested at Cornell and the California Institute of Technology, and installed at locations around the world.

Ghostly solar neutrinos caught transforming carbon atoms deep underground
2025-12-10

Ghostly solar neutrinos caught transforming carbon atoms deep underground

Neutrinos are one of the most mysterious particles in the universe, often called "ghost particles" because they rarely interact with anything else. Trillions stream through our bodies every second, yet leave no trace. They are produced during nuclear reactions, including those that take place in the core of our sun.

Tumbleweed aerodynamics inspire hybrid robots for harsh terrains
2025-12-10

Tumbleweed aerodynamics inspire hybrid robots for harsh terrains

A new study published in Nature Communications details a hybrid robot that combines the wind-driven mobility of tumbleweeds with active quadcopter control, offering a new paradigm for energy-efficient terrestrial exploration.

Top Stories: Third-Annual Discovery Days Celebrates Research and Innovation at FSU
2025-12-10

Top Stories: Third-Annual Discovery Days Celebrates Research and Innovation at FSU

The post Top Stories: Third-Annual Discovery Days Celebrates Research and Innovation at FSU appeared first on Florida State University News.

New research suggests warming winters could cause DNA damage in lizards
2025-12-10

New research suggests warming winters could cause DNA damage in lizards

The findings of a new academic paper suggest that warming winters are causing damage to the DNA of some lizards.

Uranus and Neptune might be rock giants
2025-12-10

Uranus and Neptune might be rock giants

A team of researchers from the University of Zurich and the NCCR PlanetS is challenging our understanding of the solar system planets' interior. The composition of Uranus and Neptune, the two outermost planets, might be more rocky and less icy than previously thought.

Massive non-cool-core galaxy cluster explored with Chandra
2025-12-10

Massive non-cool-core galaxy cluster explored with Chandra

Astronomers have employed NASA's Chandra spacecraft to perform X-ray observations of a massive galaxy cluster known as SPT-CL J0217-5014. Results of the observational campaign, published December 4 on the arXiv preprint server, yield important insights into the properties and nature of this cluster.

Neutrino observatories show promise for detecting light dark matter
2025-12-10

Neutrino observatories show promise for detecting light dark matter

Dark matter is an elusive type of matter that does not emit, reflect or absorb light, yet is estimated to account for most of the universe's mass. Over the past decades, many physicists worldwide have been trying to detect this type of matter or signals associated with its presence, employing various approaches and technologies.

Canada launches billion dollar plan to recruit top researchers
2025-12-10

Canada launches billion dollar plan to recruit top researchers

The plan is not strictly catered to U.S.-based researchers impacted by Trump

2025-12-10

How multi-agent AI can strengthen space missions against the unknown - SpaceNews

How multi-agent AI can strengthen space missions against the unknown SpaceNewsAI is making spacecraft propulsion more efficient – and could even lead to nuclear-powered rockets SpaceAI Could Revolutionize Space Travel: Faster Rockets and More Efficient Propulsion The Daily Galaxy

This Low-Cost Stopgap Tech Can Fix the Grid
2025-12-10

This Low-Cost Stopgap Tech Can Fix the Grid

The power surging through transmission lines over the iconic stone walls of England’s northern countryside is pushing the United Kingdom’s grid to its limits. To the north, Scottish wind farms have doubled their output over the past decade. In the south, where electricity demand is heaviest, electrification and new data centers promise to draw more power, but new generation is falling short. Construction on a new 3,280-megawatt nuclear power plant west of London lags years behind schedule.The result is a lopsided flow of power that’s maxing out transmission corridors from the Highlands to London. That grid strain won’t ease any time soon. New lines linking Scotland to southern England are at least three to four years from operation, and at risk of further delays from fierce local opposition.At the same time, U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer is bent on installing even more wind power and slashing fossil-fuel generation by 2030. His Labour government says low-carbon power is cheaper and more secure than natural gas, much of which comes from Norway via the world’s longest underwater gas pipeline and is vulnerable to disruption and sabotage. The lack of transmission lines available to move power flowing south from Scottish wind farms has caused grid congestion in England. To better manage it, the U.K. has installed SmartValves at three substations in northern England—Penwortham, Harker, and Saltholme—and is constructing a fourth at South Shields. Chris Philpot The U.K.’s resulting grid congestion prevents transmission operators from delivering some of their cleanest, cheapest generation to all of the consumers who want it. Congestion is a perennial problem whenever power consumption is on the rise. It pushes circuits to their thermal limits and creates grid stability or security constraints.With congestion relief needed now, the U.K.’s grid operators are getting creative, rapidly tapping new cable designs and innovations in power electronics to squeeze more power through existing transmission corridors. These grid-enhancing technologies, or GETs, present a low-cost way to bridge the gap until new lines can be built.“GETs allow us to operate the system harder before an investment arrives, and they save a s***load of money,” says Julian Leslie, chief engineer and director of strategic energy planning at the National Energy System Operator (NESO), the Warwick-based agency that directs U.K. energy markets and infrastructure. Transmission lines running across England’s countryside are maxed out, creating bottlenecks in the grid that prevent some carbon-free power from reaching customers. Vincent Lowe/Alamy The U.K.’s extreme grid challenge has made it ground zero for some of the boldest GETs testing and deployment. Such innovation involves some risk, because an intervention anywhere on the U.K.’s tightly meshed power system can have system-wide impacts. (Grid operators elsewhere are choosing to start with GETs at their systems’ periphery—where there’s less impact if something goes wrong.)The question is how far—and how fast—the U.K.’s grid operators can push GETs capabilities. The new technologies still have a limited track record, so operators are cautiously feeling their way toward heavier investment. Power system experts also have unanswered questions about these advanced grid capabilities. For example, will they create more complexity than grid operators can manage in real time? Might feedback between different devices destabilize the grid?There is no consensus yet as to how to even screen for such risks, let alone protect against them, says Robin Preece, professor in future power systems at the University of Manchester, in England. “We’re at the start of establishing that now, but we’re building at the same time. So it’s kind of this race between the necessity to get this technology installed as quickly as possible, and our ability to fully understand what’s happening.”How is the U.K. Managing Grid Congestion?One of the most innovative and high-stakes tricks in the U.K.’s toolbox employs electronic power-flow controllers, devices that shift electricity from jammed circuits to those with spare capacity. These devices have been able to finesse enough additional wind power through grid bottlenecks to replace an entire gas-fired generator. Installed in northern England four years ago by Smart Wires, based in Durham, N.C., these SmartValves are expected to help even more as NESO installs more of them and masters their capabilities.Warwick-based National Grid Electricity Transmission, the grid operator for England and Wales, is adding SmartValves and also replacing several thousand kilometers of overhead wire with advanced conductors that can carry more current. And it’s using a technique called dynamic line rating, whereby sensors and models work together to predict when weather conditions will allow lines to carry extra current.Other kinds of GETs are also being used globally. Advanced conductors are the most widely deployed. Dynamic line rating is increasingly common in European countries, and U.S. utilities are beginning to take it seriously. Europe also leads the world in topology-optimization software, which reconfigures power routes to alleviate congestion, and advanced power-flow-control devices like SmartValves. Engineers install dynamic line rating technology from the Boston-based company LineVision on National Grid’s transmission network. National Grid Electricity Transmission SmartValves’ chops stand out at the Penwortham substation in Lancashire, England, one of two National Grid sites where the device made its U.K. debut in 2021. Penwortham substation is a major transmission hub, whose spokes desperately need congestion relief. Auditory evidence of heavy power flows was clear during my visit to the substation, which buzzes loudly. The sound is due to the electromechanical stresses on the substation’s massive transformers, explains my guide, National Grid commissioned engineer Paul Lloyd.Penwortham’s transformers, circuits, and protective relays are spread over 15 hectares, sandwiched between pastureland and suburban homes near Preston, a small city north of Manchester. Power arrives from the north on two pairs of 400-kilovolt AC lines, and most of it exits southward via 400-kV and 275-kV double-circuit wires. Transmission lines lead to the congested Penwortham substation, which has become a test-bed for GETs such as SmartValves and dynamic line rating. Peter Fairley What makes the substation a strategic test-bed for GETs is its position just north of the U.K. grid’s biggest bottleneck, known as Boundary B7a, which runs east to west across the island. Nine circuits traverse the B7a: the four AC lines headed south from Penwortham, four AC lines closer to Yorkshire’s North Sea coast, and a high-voltage direct-current (HVDC) link offshore. In theory, those circuits can collectively carry 13.6 gigawatts across the B7a. But NESO caps its flow at several gigawatts lower to ensure that no circuits overload if any two lines turn off.Such limits are necessary for grid reliability, but they are leaving terawatt-hours of wind power stranded in Scotland and increasing consumers’ energy costs: an extra £196 million (US $265 million) in 2024 alone. The costs stem from NESO having to ramp up gas-fired generators to meet demand down south while simultaneously compensating wind-farm operators for curtailing their output, as required under U.K. policy.So National Grid keeps tweaking Penwortham. In 2011 the substation got its first big GET: phase-shifting transformers (PSTs), a type of analog flow controller. PSTs adjust power flow by creating an AC waveform whose alternating voltage leads or lags its alternating current. They do so by each PST using a pair of connected transformers to selectively combine power from an AC transmission circuit’s three phases. Motors reposition electrical connections on the transformer coils to adjust flows. Phase-shifting transformers (PSTs) were installed in 2012 at the Penwortham substation and are the analog predecessor to SmartValves. They’re powerful but also bulky and relatively inflexible. It can take 10 minutes or more for the PST’s motorized actuators at Penwortham to tap their full range of flow control, whereas SmartValves can shift within milliseconds.National Grid Electricity Transmission Penwortham’s pair of 540-tonne PSTs occupy the entire south end of the substation, along with their dedicated chillers, relays, and power supplies. Delivering all that hardware required extensive road closures and floating a huge barge up the adjacent River Ribble, an event that made national news.The SmartValves at Penwortham stand in stark contrast to the PSTs’ heft, complexity, and mechanics. SmartValves are a type of static synchronous series compensator, or SSSC—a solid-state alternative to PSTs that employs power electronics to tweak power flows in milliseconds. I saw two sets of them tucked into a corner of the substation, occupying a quarter of the area of the PSTs. The SmartValve V103 design [above] experienced some teething and reliability issues that were ironed out with the technology’s next iteration, the V104. National Grid Electricity Transmission/Smart Wires The SmartValves are first and foremost an insurance policy to guard against a potentially crippling event: the sudden loss of one of the B7a’s 400-kV lines. If that were to happen, gigawatts of power would instantly seek another route over neighboring lines. And if it happened on a windy day, when lots of power is streaming in from the north, the resulting surge could overload the 275-kV circuits headed from Penwortham to Liverpool. The SmartValves’ job is to save the day.They do this by adding impedance to the 275-kV lines, thus acting to divert more power to the remaining 400-kV lines. This rerouting of power prevents a blackout that could potentially cascade through the grid. The upside to that protection is that NESO can safely schedule an additional 350 MW over the B7a.The savings add up. “That’s 350 MW of wind you’re no longer curtailing from wind farms. So that’s 350 times £100 a megawatt-hour,” says Leslie, at NESO. “That’s also 350 MW of gas-fired power that you don’t need to replace the wind. So that’s 350 times £120 a megawatt-hour. The numbers get big quickly.”Mark Osborne, the National Grid lead asset life-cycle engineer managing its SmartValve projects, estimates the devices are saving U.K. customers over £100 million (US $132 million) a year. At that rate, they’ll pay for themselves “within a few years,” Osborne says. By utility standards, where investments are normally amortized over decades, that’s “almost immediately,” he adds.How Do Grid-Enhancing Technologies Work?The way Smart Wires’ SSSC devices adjust power flow is based on emulating impedance, which is a strange beast created by AC power. An AC flow’s changing magnetic field induces an additional voltage in the line’s conductor, which then acts as a drag on the initial field. Smart Wires’ SSSC devices alter power flow by emulating that natural process, effectively adding or subtracting impedance by adding their own voltage wave to the line. Adding a wave that leads the original voltage wave will boost flow, while adding a lagging wave will reduce flow.The SSSC’s submodules of capacitors and high-speed insulated-gate bipolar transistors operate in sequence to absorb power from a line and synthesize its novel impedance-altering waves. And thanks to its digital controls and switches, the device can within milliseconds flip from maximum power push to maximum pull.You can trace the development of SSSCs to the advent of HVDC transmission in the 1950s. HVDC converters take power from an AC grid and efficiently convert it and transfer it over a DC line to another point in the same grid, or to a neighboring AC grid. In 1985, Narain Hingorani, an HVDC expert at the Palo Alto–based Electric Power Research Institute, showed that similar converters could modulate the flow of an AC line. Four years later, Westinghouse engineer Laszlo Gyugyi proposed SSSCs, which became the basis for Smart Wires’ boxes.Major power-equipment manufacturers tried to commercialize SSSCs in the early 2000s. But utilities had little need for flow control back then because they had plenty of conventional power plants that could meet local demand when transmission lines were full.The picture changed as solar and wind generation exploded and conventional plants began shutting down. In years past, grid operators addressed grid congestion by turning power plants on or off in strategic locations. But as of 2024, the U.K. had shut down all of its coal-fired power plants—save one, which now burns wood—and it has vowed to slash gas-fired generation from about a quarter of electricity supply in 2024 to at most 5 percent in 2030.The U.K.’s extreme grid challenge has made it ground zero for some of the boldest GETs testing and deployment.To seize the emerging market opportunity presented by changing grid operations, Smart Wires had to make a crucial technology upgrade: ditching transformers. The company’s first SSSC, and those from other suppliers, relied on a transformer to absorb lightning, voltage surges, and every other grid assault that could fry their power electronics. This made them bulky and added cost. So Smart Wires engineers set to work in 2017 to see if they could live without the transformer, says Frank Kreikebaum, Smart Wires’s interim chief of engineering. Two years later the company had assembled a transformerless electronic shield. It consisted of a suite of filters and diverters, along with a control system to activate them. Ditching the transformer produced a trim, standardized product—a modular system-in-a-box.SmartValves work at any voltage and are generally ganged together to achieve a desired level of flow control. They can be delivered fast, and they fit in the kinds of tight spaces that are common in substations. “It’s not about cost, even though we’re competitive there. It’s about ‘how quick’ and ‘can it fit,’” says Kreikebaum.And if the grid’s pinch point shifts? The devices can be quickly moved to another substation. “It’s a Lego-brick build,” says Owen Wilkes, National Grid’s director of network design. Wilkes’s team decides where to add equipment based on today’s best projections, but he appreciates the flexibility to respond to unexpected changes.National Grid’s deployments in 2021 were the highest-voltage installation of SSSCs at the time, and success there is fueling expansion. National Grid now has packs of SmartValves installed at three substations in northern England and under construction at another, with five more installations planned in that area. Smart Wires has also commissioned commercial projects at transmission substations in Australia, Brazil, Colombia, and the United States.Dynamic Line Rating Boosts Grid EfficiencyIn addition to SSSCs, National Grid has deployed lidar that senses sag on Penwortham’s 275-kV lines—an indication that they’re starting to overheat. The sensors are part of a dynamic line rating system and help grid operators maximize the amount of current that high-voltage lines can carry based on near-real-time weather conditions. (Cooler weather means more capacity.) Now the same technology is being deployed across the B7a—a £1 million investment that is projected to save consumers £33 million annually, says Corin Ireland, a National Grid optimization engineer with the task of seizing GETs opportunities.There’s also a lot of old conductor wires being swapped out for those that can carry more power. National Grid’s business plan calls for 2,416 kilometers of such reconductoring over the coming five years, which is about 20 percent of its system. Scotland’s transmission operators are busy with their own big swaps. Scottish wind farms have doubled their power output over the past decade, but it often gets stranded due to grid congestion in England. Andreas Berthold/Alamy But while National Grid and NESO are making some of the boldest deployments of GETs in the world, they’re not fully tapping the technologies’ capabilities. That’s partly due to the conservative nature of power utilities, and partly because grid operators already have plenty to keep their eyes on. It also stems from the unknowns that still surround GETs, like whether they might take the grid in unforeseen directions if allowed to respond automatically, or get stuck in a feedback loop responding to each other. Imagine SmartValve controllers at different substations fighting, with one substation jumping to remove impedance that the other just added, causing fluctuating power flows.“These technologies operate very quickly, but the computers in the control room are still very reliant on people making decisions,” says Ireland. “So there are time scales that we have to take into consideration when planning and operating the network.”This kind of conservative dispatching leaves value on the table. For example, the dynamic line rating models can spit out new line ratings every 15 minutes, but grid operators get updates only every 24 hours. Fewer updates means fewer opportunities to tap the system’s ability to boost capacity. Similarly, for SmartValves, NESO activates installations at only one substation at a time. And control-room operators turn them on manually, even though the devices could automatically respond to faults within milliseconds. National Grid is upgrading transmission lines dating as far back as the 1960s. This includes installing conductors that retain their strength at higher temperatures, allowing them to carry more power. National Grid Electricity Transmission Modeling by Smart Wires and National Grid shows a significant capacity boost across Boundary B7a if Penwortham’s SmartValves were to work in tandem with another set further up the line. For example, when Penwortham is adding impedance to push megawatts off the 275-kV lines, a set closer to Scotland could simultaneously pull the power north, nudging the sum over to the B7a’s eastern circuits. Simulations by Andy Hiorns, a former National Grid planning director who consults for Smart Wires, suggest that this kind of cooperative action should increase the B7a circuits’ usable capacity by another 250 to 300 MW. “You double the effectiveness by using them as pairs,” he says.Operating multiple flow controllers may become necessary for unlocking the next boundary en route to London, south of the B7a, called Boundary B8. As dynamic line rating, beefier conductors, and SmartValves send more power across the B7a, lines traversing B8 are reaching their limits. Eventually, every boundary along the route will have to be upgraded.Meanwhile, back at its U.S. headquarters, Smart Wires is developing other applications for its SSSCs, such as filtering out power oscillations that can destabilize grids and reduce allowable transfers. That capability could be unlocked remotely with firmware.The company is also working on a test program that could turn on pairs of SmartValve installations during slack moments when there isn’t much going on in the control rooms. That would give National Grid and NESO operators an opportunity to observe the impacts, and to get more comfortable with the technology.National Grid and Smart Wires are also hard at work developing industry-first optimization software for coordinating flow-control devices. “It’s possible to extend the technology from how we’re using it today,” says Ireland at National Grid. “That’s the exciting bit.”NESO’s Julian Leslie shares that excitement and says he expects SmartValves to begin working together to ease power through the grid—once the operators have the modeling right and get a little more comfortable with the technology. “It’s a great innovation that has the potential to be really transformational,” he says. “We’re just not quite there yet.”

Extremely Large Telescope under construction | Space photo of the day for Dec. 10, 2025
2025-12-10

Extremely Large Telescope under construction | Space photo of the day for Dec. 10, 2025

Once completed, this telescope will help usher in a new era of astronomy.

Lecture-based courses don't work for older adults, researchers warn
2025-12-10

Lecture-based courses don't work for older adults, researchers warn

Learning later in life isn't just possible, it is important for good quality of life. It can boost memory, emotional well-being, and even a sense of purpose. A new study shows that older adults learn best when they're taught the same way that is best for younger people, with active participation, meaningful discussions, and material that feels relevant to their lives. The findings emphasize that the common method of lecture-based learning does not fit older adults' characteristics because it requires good memory and often feels irrelevant.

This Arkansas City Shows How to Slash Emissions and Save Money, Too
2025-12-10

This Arkansas City Shows How to Slash Emissions and Save Money, Too

In the Ozarks, the growing college town of Fayetteville, Ark., is using clean energy to power city facilities and embracing nature-based solutions to climate threats.

Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly weighs in on the push by some in Congress to see video of the 2nd strike on an alleged drug boat
2025-12-10

Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly weighs in on the push by some in Congress to see video of the 2nd strike on an alleged drug boat

A bipartisan push continues to compel the Pentagon to release footage of the double-tap strike by the US military on an alleged drug boat. "As soon as there’s something that’s questionable... they want to keep that from the American people," says Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly.

LLNL and Energy I-Corps Take Science From Big Ideas to Big Market Impact
2025-12-10

LLNL and Energy I-Corps Take Science From Big Ideas to Big Market Impact

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) pursues big ideas to solve the most important security challenges facing the U.S. and the world. In that pursuit, scientific breakthroughs with market potential are discovered, protected and licensed to (or collaborated on) with industry partners through a process called technology transfer.

Police investigating report of AI-generated explicit images that prompted walkout at Corbett High School
2025-12-10

Police investigating report of AI-generated explicit images that prompted walkout at Corbett High School

Students at Corbett High School staged a walkout on Tuesday, alleging that school administrators failed to act when informed that the images were circulating online.

LZ Dark Matter Experiment Sets a World's Best and Spots Neutrinos From the Sun's Core
2025-12-10

LZ Dark Matter Experiment Sets a World's Best and Spots Neutrinos From the Sun's Core

There's more to the universe than meets the eye. Dark matter, the invisible substance that accounts for 85 percent of the mass in the...

Wyoming Cowboys Are Breaking Down Barriers, Literally
2025-12-10

Wyoming Cowboys Are Breaking Down Barriers, Literally

GPS collars on cattle are letting ranchers remove fences in the West. That’s good for wildlife and for the land.

2025-12-10

Ranchers in South Dakota Turn to Prescribed Burns to Treat Their Land

A “green glacier” of trees is steadily taking over native grasslands. Landowners are banding together to treat the problem with fire.

The quest to slow aging leads scientists into the powerhouse of cells
2025-12-10

The quest to slow aging leads scientists into the powerhouse of cells

Aging taps us on the shoulder in many ways: wrinkles, thinning hair, loss of flexibility, slowing of the brain. But the process also unfolds at a more...

GNPS Drug Library Uncovers Drug Exposures Using Untargeted Metabolomics
2025-12-10

GNPS Drug Library Uncovers Drug Exposures Using Untargeted Metabolomics

Researchers say comparing unknown compounds in a patient’s blood or urine to those in the publicly available GNPS Drug Library reveals a more accurate picture of their drug exposure than what may be listed on a patient’s medical record.The post GNPS Drug Library Uncovers Drug Exposures Using Untargeted Metabolomics appeared first on GEN - Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News.

A water-energy-food nexus framework for sustainable agriculture in water-stressed regions
2025-12-10

A water-energy-food nexus framework for sustainable agriculture in water-stressed regions

A comprehensive systems analysis reveals that Pakistan's agricultural sector is on an unsustainable trajectory. Current input-intensive practices cannot meet future food security needs without increasing ecological stress. A new study published in Agricultural Systems presents the first quantitative framework for transitioning to sustainable agriculture through integrated water-energy-food (WEF) nexus management. This framework has broad relevance for semi-arid regions worldwide.

Undergrads launch magazine featuring in-depth stories
2025-12-10

Undergrads launch magazine featuring in-depth stories

A new student-run magazine focuses on long-form journalism that reflects the culture of Cornell and Ithaca.

2025-12-10

Journal of Cardiac Failure December Issue Showcases Innovations in Transplant Care, Digital Therapeutics, and Global Heart Failure Treatment Strategies

The December issue of the Journal of Cardiac Failure (JCF), now available, offers a robust lineup of original research, expert consensus, and clinical insights that explore heart failure (HF) through a multidisciplinary, inclusive, and globally engaged lens.

Your pet dog, even the chihuahua, may still carry wolf genes
2025-12-10

Your pet dog, even the chihuahua, may still carry wolf genes

Most pet dogs carry a little wolf inside them; tiny snippets of wolf DNA that slipped into dog genomes after domestication. A new study, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, has found that almost two-thirds of dog breeds have a small amount of wolf genes, which may have provided them with unique advantages to survive in diverse human environments.Continue ReadingCategory: Biology, ScienceTags: Pets, Dogs, Genetics, DNA, Evolution

2025-12-10

New gravitational lens measurements reveal a faster expansion rate for the universe - The Brighter Side of News

New gravitational lens measurements reveal a faster expansion rate for the universe The Brighter Side of NewsHubble Tension: Gravitational Lenses Confirm That Something Is Still Broken In The Universe IFLScienceQuasar time delays give astronomers bold new clue to cosmic expansion Interesting EngineeringThis Telescope’s Final Data Release Just Killed 30 Cosmological Theories Gizmodo'Hubble tension' is back again as a new cosmic map deepens the puzzle Space

2025-12-10

Best Astrophotos of the Week [2-9 Dec]: Last Full Moon of 2025, Sky Halo, And More! - Orbital Today

Best Astrophotos of the Week [2-9 Dec]: Last Full Moon of 2025, Sky Halo, And More! Orbital TodayBreathtaking images of the supermoon from around the world CTV NewsIN PHOTOS | See final supermoon of 2025 CBCLook up! The Full Cold Supermoon shines highest in the sky this week The Weather NetworkA look at the most beautiful supermoon moments worldwide – DW – 12/05/2025 DW

2025-12-10

Smart Hospitality Market To Soar To $133.7 Billion By 2031 At 22% CAGR

(MENAFN - EIN Presswire) EINPresswire/ -- According to a new report published by Allied Market Research, Smart Hospitality Market Size, Share, Competitive Landscape and Trend Analysis Report, by ...

Just how monogamous are humans? Scientists break down how we compare with other animals | CNN
2025-12-10

Just how monogamous are humans? Scientists break down how we compare with other animals | CNN

Humans are far more monogamous than our primate cousins, but less so than beavers, a new study suggests.

Just how monogamous are humans? Scientists break down how we compare with other animals
2025-12-10

Just how monogamous are humans? Scientists break down how we compare with other animals

Humans are far more monogamous than our primate cousins, but less so than beavers, a new study suggests.

Live coverage: SpaceX to launch 160th Falcon 9 rocket of 2025
2025-12-10

Live coverage: SpaceX to launch 160th Falcon 9 rocket of 2025

The Starlink 15-11 mission will add another 27 broadband internet satellites to the low Earth orbit megaconstellation. Liftoff from pad 4E at Vandenberg Space Force Base is scheduled for 3:40 a.m. PST (6:40 a.m. EST / 1140 UTC).

A new traveling-wave Josephson amplifier with built-in reverse isolation
2025-12-09

A new traveling-wave Josephson amplifier with built-in reverse isolation

Traveling-wave parametric amplifiers (TWPAs) are electronic devices that boost weak microwave signals (i.e., electromagnetic waves with frequencies typically ranging between 1 and 100 GHz). Recently, many engineers have been developing TWPAs based on superconductors, materials that conduct electricity with a resistance of zero at low temperatures.

Protecting orchids found nowhere else on Earth
2025-12-09

Protecting orchids found nowhere else on Earth

Australia is home to more than 1,800 orchid species—many found nowhere else. But these unique plants face growing threats.

The twisted nanotubes that tell a story: Geometry-based approach can transmit magnon-based data
2025-12-09

The twisted nanotubes that tell a story: Geometry-based approach can transmit magnon-based data

In collaboration with scientists in Germany, EPFL researchers have demonstrated that the spiral geometry of tiny, twisted magnetic tubes can be leveraged to transmit data based on quasiparticles called magnons, rather than electrons.

UN Report: Investing in planetary health would deliver higher GDP, fewer deaths, less poverty
2025-12-09

UN Report: Investing in planetary health would deliver higher GDP, fewer deaths, less poverty

The most comprehensive assessment of the global environment ever undertaken has found that investing in a stable climate, healthy nature and land, and a pollution-free planet can deliver trillions in additional global GDP, avoid millions of deaths and lift hundreds of millions of people out of poverty and hunger.

Trust in science is low among minorities for a reason, research finds
2025-12-09

Trust in science is low among minorities for a reason, research finds

The COVID-19 pandemic prompted a nationwide conversation in the U.S. about how much people trust scientists and trained medical professionals. But for some communities, distrust has been the norm.

Short-lived optical flare AT2022zod is an unusual tidal disruption event, astronomers find
2025-12-09

Short-lived optical flare AT2022zod is an unusual tidal disruption event, astronomers find

An international team of astronomers has investigated a short-lived optical flare designated AT2022zod. As a result, they found evidence indicating that this flare is an unusual tidal disruption event. The findings were presented in a research paper published Dec. 1 on the arXiv pre-print server.

Live coverage: SpaceX to launch classified payload for the National Reconnaissance Office
2025-12-09

Live coverage: SpaceX to launch classified payload for the National Reconnaissance Office

The mission, dubbed NROL-77, is likely to be the final time SpaceX uses Landing Zone 2 to recover a first stage Falcon booster. Liftoff from pad 40 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station is scheduled for 2:16 p.m. EST (1916 UTC).

A freely available tool to document wartime destruction
2025-12-09

A freely available tool to document wartime destruction

Researchers have developed a method to detect the destruction of buildings using freely available satellite radar imagery. Daniel Racek and colleagues' algorithm analyzes publicly available Sentinel-1 synthetic aperture radar images from the European Space Agency to identify destroyed buildings in conflict zones. The study is published in the journal PNAS Nexus.

Platelet-inspired nanoparticles can boost brain-computer interface electrode performance
2025-12-09

Platelet-inspired nanoparticles can boost brain-computer interface electrode performance

Scientists working to enhance brain-computer interface (BCI) technology—which allows people to control devices with their thoughts—have found they can improve the performance of electrodes implanted in the brain by targeted delivery of anti-inflammatory drugs.

Elizabethan era gold coin sold for record-breaking price
2025-12-09

Elizabethan era gold coin sold for record-breaking price

The coin minted between 1584 and 1586 celebrates England’s naval superiority.The post Elizabethan era gold coin sold for record-breaking price appeared first on Popular Science.

Astronomers capture sudden black hole blast firing ultra fast winds
2025-12-09

Astronomers capture sudden black hole blast firing ultra fast winds

A sudden X-ray flare from a supermassive black hole in galaxy NGC 3783 triggered ultra-fast winds racing outward at a fifth the speed of light—an event never witnessed before. Using XMM-Newton and XRISM, astronomers caught the blast unfold in real time, revealing how tangled magnetic fields can rapidly “untwist” and hurl matter into space much like an enormous, cosmic-scale version of the Sun’s coronal mass ejections.

White paper on leadership opportunities for AI to increase employee value released
2025-12-09

White paper on leadership opportunities for AI to increase employee value released

University of Phoenix College of Doctoral Studies announces a new white paper, "Leadership Opportunities for Increasing Employee Value through Artificial Intelligence," authored by Andrew C. Lawlor, Ph.D., and Pamayla E. Darbyshire, DHA, MSN/CNS, both Fellows at the Center for Educational and Instructional Technology Research (CEITR).

World's rarest marsupial: What new research reveals about its survival needs
2025-12-09

World's rarest marsupial: What new research reveals about its survival needs

Researchers from Edith Cowan University (ECU) along with the Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions (DBCA) have been working together to help protect the world's rarest marsupial by better understanding their diet. The critically endangered Gilbert's potoroo, which is native to Western Australia, has less than 150 individuals remaining in the wild.

China Renaissance Begins Coverage on Reddit (NYSE:RDDT)
2025-12-09

China Renaissance Begins Coverage on Reddit (NYSE:RDDT)

Analysts at China Renaissance initiated coverage on shares of Reddit (NYSE:RDDT – Get Free Report) in a research note issued on Tuesday. The brokerage set a “buy” rating and a $300.00 price target on the stock. China Renaissance’s target price suggests a potential upside of 26.62% from the company’s current price. Other equities research analysts [...]

The holiday shopping season comes with tons of extra emissions. Here's how to do it sustainably
2025-12-09

The holiday shopping season comes with tons of extra emissions. Here's how to do it sustainably

The National Retail Federation forecasts that 2025 will be the first time we collectively spend more than $1 trillion on year-end gifts. A lot of materials,...

From light to logic: Ultrafast quantum switching in 2D materials
2025-12-09

From light to logic: Ultrafast quantum switching in 2D materials

Scientists from the Indian Institute of Technology Bombay have found a way to use light to control and read tiny quantum states inside atom-thin materials. The simple technique could pave the way for computers that are dramatically faster and consume far less power than today's electronics.

It's the JWST's turn to look for an intermediate mass black hole
2025-12-09

It's the JWST's turn to look for an intermediate mass black hole

Intermediate mass black holes (IMBH), if they exist, have between about 100 and 1,000 solar masses, placing them in between stellar black holes and supermassive black holes. But while there's plenty of evidence for both stellar mass black holes and supermassive black holes, the evidence for IMBHs isn't as convincing. There are many candidates, but there's no wide agreement on any of them. Yet our theories of black holes show there should be something in between stellar black holes and supermassive black holes, and IMBHs could be the missing link.

Microneedle system delivers biofertilizer directly into plants, boosting growth with less waste
2025-12-09

Microneedle system delivers biofertilizer directly into plants, boosting growth with less waste

Researchers at the National University of Singapore (NUS) have developed dissolving microneedle patches that deliver living "biofertilizer" straight into plant tissue. In greenhouse tests, Choy Sum and Kale grew faster—by shoot biomass, leaf area and height—while using more than 15% less biofertilizer than standard soil inoculation.

2025-12-09

How to watch one of the year's best meteor showers, the Geminids - Yahoo News Canada

How to watch one of the year's best meteor showers, the Geminids Yahoo News CanadaThe Geminid meteor shower is this week. See when it will peak. Yahoo News CanadaWhat’s Up: December 2025 Skywatching Tips from NASA NASA Science (.gov)Starwatch: Brave the cold and the enjoy the Geminids meteor shower The GuardianThe Geminids are one of the best meteor showers of the year—and the weirdest. Here’s how to see them National Geographic

Archaeologists uncover intact section of ancient Jerusalem wall from Hanukkah era
2025-12-09

Archaeologists uncover intact section of ancient Jerusalem wall from Hanukkah era

Archaeologists have finished uncovering the longest continuous remains of an ancient wall that encircled Jerusalem, including possible evidence of a 2,100...

2025-12-09

UC Berkeley professor installed secret camera, allegedly catching Ph.D. candidate sabotaging fellow student’s work

BERKELEY, Calif. — A UC Berkeley professor smelled a rat — over the years there had been $46,855 in damage from computers that failed, and nearly all of it seemed to affect one particular Ph.D. candidate at the college’s Electronic...

2025-12-09

Study claims the universe will end sooner than we thought - Earth.com

Study claims the universe will end sooner than we thought Earth.comFROM THE ARCHIVE: How will the universe end? (with Dr. Katie Mack) WVXUCurious Kids: How will the universe end? Kiowa County PressThe Universe Might Just Go Dark Forever, Scientists Say VICEWill new physics affect our Universe’s far future? Big Think

3-man crew undocks from space station, wrapping up 8-month stay
2025-12-09

3-man crew undocks from space station, wrapping up 8-month stay

Russian Soyuz crews are now spending eight months aboard the space station instead of six to stretch supplies and lower costs.

2025-12-09

Landmark Pig Organ Transplants Raise a Curious Paradox, Says Ethicist - ScienceAlert

Landmark Pig Organ Transplants Raise a Curious Paradox, Says Ethicist ScienceAlertPutting pig organs in people is OK in the US, but growing human organs in pigs is not – why is that? The Conversation

Active zones and mini retreats—how to build preschools suitable for neurodivergent kids
2025-12-09

Active zones and mini retreats—how to build preschools suitable for neurodivergent kids

An estimated 15–20% of children are neurodivergent, with diagnoses rising each year. They may have a neurodevelopmental condition such as autism or attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder.

California Teens Spark Outrage With Human Swastika on Field
2025-12-09

California Teens Spark Outrage With Human Swastika on Field

A photo showing eight California high school students forming a human swastika on a football field has triggered widespread outrage and concerns about antisemitism in the Bay Area. The image, originally posted on social media by a Branham High School student in San Jose, included a quote attributed to Adolf...

Japan leads the world in responding to earthquakes. Here's why
2025-12-09

Japan leads the world in responding to earthquakes. Here's why

The latest earthquake in Japan on Dec. 8, which triggered widespread shaking and tsunami alerts, served as another clear example of the nation’s world-leading earthquake response efforts. CBC’s Johanna Wagstaffe explores the factors that make Japan stand out and the lessons other earthquake-prone countries can learn from their approach.

2025-12-09

Antimicrobial Peptides In Oral Medicine: From Mechanisms To Clinical Translation

(MENAFN - EIN Presswire) EINPresswire/ -- Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) exhibit broad-spectrum antimicrobial activity, low propensity to induce bacterial resistance, and multifunctional properties ...

2025-12-09

Turning Light Into Insight: New Mouse Model Unlocks Mysteries Of Non-Visual Photoreception

(MENAFN - EIN Presswire) EINPresswire/ -- Scientists have engineered a new mouse model that reveals how Opn3 -a little-known blue light-sensitive protein-affects body temperature and eye ...

Gen Z is burning out at work more than any other generation. Here's why and what can be done
2025-12-09

Gen Z is burning out at work more than any other generation. Here's why and what can be done

Gen Z workers are reporting some of the highest burnout levels ever recorded, with new research suggesting they are buckling under unprecedented levels of stress.

NASA robot rover shows that sparks fly in dust storms on Mars
2025-12-09

NASA robot rover shows that sparks fly in dust storms on Mars

Sometimes you get a small electric shock from touching your car door handle on a dry summer's day.

Illinois Research Uncovers Harvest and Nutrient Strategies to Boost Bioenergy Profits
2025-12-09

Illinois Research Uncovers Harvest and Nutrient Strategies to Boost Bioenergy Profits

To meet ambitious U.S. Department of Energy targets for sustainable aviation fuel (SAF), production of purpose-grown energy crops must ramp up significantly. Although researchers have made substantial progress in understanding the management and conversion of these crops, key knowledge gaps hold the industry back.

2025-12-09

Firefighting Robots Market Competition Analysis 2025: How Players Are Shaping Growth

(MENAFN - EIN Presswire) EINPresswire/ -- The Firefighting Robots market is dominated by a mix of global technology leaders and specialized robotics manufacturers. Companies are focusing on ...

2025-12-09

Biosimilar Market Size, Share, Trends & Forecast 2025-2032: Competitive Analysis & USD 102.29 Billion Growth Projection

(MENAFN - EIN Presswire) EINPresswire/ -- Global Biosimilar Market Soars: Patent Expirations, AI Innovations & Oncology Demand Drive Unprecedented GrowthGlobal Biosimilar Market Report 2025 ...

You Don’t Need a Big Brain to Fly
2025-12-09

You Don’t Need a Big Brain to Fly

New research into the ancestors of pterosaurs reveals surprising clues to the evolution of flightThe post You Don’t Need a Big Brain to Fly appeared first on Nautilus.

First-Generation UCF Grad Leverages AI to Boost Nonprofits’ Impact
2025-12-08

First-Generation UCF Grad Leverages AI to Boost Nonprofits’ Impact

Ketty Dones ’23, who is graduating with dual master’s degrees in public administration and nonprofit management, works with the Applied AI Innovation Initiative at UCF to provide local nonprofit organizations with technical assistance for AI-integrated solutions that help drive their missions.

Researchers Are Out to Take a Bite Out of a Big Challenge for Christmas Tree Growers: Deer
2025-12-08

Researchers Are Out to Take a Bite Out of a Big Challenge for Christmas Tree Growers: Deer

Can researchers stop deer from eating Christmas trees?.

2025-12-08

Southampton Santa Parade popular at any age - Saugeen Times

Southampton Santa Parade popular at any age Saugeen Times

Study of unique blue pigment from the Amazon incorporates Indigenous people in every step
2025-12-08

Study of unique blue pigment from the Amazon incorporates Indigenous people in every step

A new study by scholars from UCLA, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and the University of São Paulo not only sheds light on a unique blue pigment from the Amazon but also took the highly unusual step of including Indigenous people in every step of a research project on their own cultural and artistic practices.

Congestion pricing improved air quality in NYC and suburbs
2025-12-08

Congestion pricing improved air quality in NYC and suburbs

Cornell researchers tallied the environmental benefits of New York City’s congestion pricing program and found air pollution dropped by 22% in Manhattan, with additional declines across the city’s five boroughs and surrounding suburbs.

Workshop, talk focused on applying lessons learned from COVID
2025-12-08

Workshop, talk focused on applying lessons learned from COVID

Scholars converged at Cornell to talk about lessons policymakers and elected officials could glean from their research into the COVID pandemic to help deal with the next public health emergency.

Embrace community, lived experiences for better mentoring
2025-12-08

Embrace community, lived experiences for better mentoring

Sweeney Windchief, professor of adult and higher education at Montana State University, discussed mentoring relationships during a 2025 MAC Public Keynote.

Doctoral alumna selected for CGS/ProQuest Distinguished Dissertation Award
2025-12-08

Doctoral alumna selected for CGS/ProQuest Distinguished Dissertation Award

Anthropology alumna Dusti Bridges, Ph.D. ’25, was selected for the CGS/ProQuest Distinguished Dissertation Awards in the humanities and fine arts.

2025-12-08

Has a wise man at Nasa solved the Star of Bethlehem mystery? - The Times

Has a wise man at Nasa solved the Star of Bethlehem mystery? The TimesHave Astronomers Found the True ‘Star of Bethlehem’? Scientific American

2025-12-08

The SWOT satellite took the first "X-ray" of a tsunami from space - Evidence Network

The SWOT satellite took the first "X-ray" of a tsunami from space Evidence NetworkNASA Satellite Captures First-Ever High-Res View of a Giant Pacific Tsunami SciTechDailySatellite captures the first detailed look at a massive tsunami Earth.comFirst Detailed Look at a Tsunami From Space Reveals Unexpected Feature ScienceAlertFirst detailed tsunami seen from space by NASA, CNES — Here’s why it matters Moneycontrol

STAT+: Structure reports promising weight loss outcomes with obesity drug, but side effect questions loom
2025-12-08

STAT+: Structure reports promising weight loss outcomes with obesity drug, but side effect questions loom

An investigational GLP-1 pill from Structure Therapeutics led to substantial weight loss, but patients also had high rates of nausea and vomiting.

MIT Engineers Unveil Needle-Free Glucose Monitor with Raman Tech
2025-12-08

MIT Engineers Unveil Needle-Free Glucose Monitor with Raman Tech

MIT engineers have developed a noninvasive glucose monitoring device using Raman spectroscopy, which analyzes scattered near-infrared light on the skin to measure blood sugar levels accurately without needles. This prototype, tested on pigs, promises to transform diabetes management by improving comfort and accessibility for millions worldwide.

NASA's Hubble telescope gets another look at 3I/ATLAS. Here's what it found
2025-12-08

NASA's Hubble telescope gets another look at 3I/ATLAS. Here's what it found

New 3I/ATLAS images from NASA and the ESA suggest the interstellar comet is active as it approaches Earth in December.

Attendees at ASH 2025 Hear Strategy for Improving Efficacy and Reducing Toxicity of CAR T-Cell Therapy
2025-12-08

Attendees at ASH 2025 Hear Strategy for Improving Efficacy and Reducing Toxicity of CAR T-Cell Therapy

Roswell Park doctors to lead presentation on factors that lead to resistance in CAR T-cell therapy

2025-12-08

Agora Open Science Trust Announces Nomination of M4K2009 as Lead Development Candidate for Pediatric Brain Cancer Therapy

A major milestone in open science drug discovery is marked by the advancement of M4K Pharma’s ALK2 inhibitor program into IND-enabling studies for Diffuse Intrinsic Pontine Glioma (DIPG). The advancement was supported by Conscience’s Developing Medicine through Open Science (DMOS) program, which enables collaborative, early-stage research in the hopes of accelerating development of treatments for [...]

Program explores Japan’s Kansai region through interdisciplinary lens
2025-12-08

Program explores Japan’s Kansai region through interdisciplinary lens

The faculty-led study abroad program offers an opportunity to explore Japan’s Kansai region through engagement with cultural texts, classroom discussions and immersive site visits.

Fermentation makes ocean greens more palatable
2025-12-08

Fermentation makes ocean greens more palatable

Seaweed has long been praised as a sustainable superfood, but its characteristic "fishy" flavor has been a barrier for many Western consumers. Now, a new study from the University of Copenhagen shows that fermentation with lactic acid bacteria may be the key to making seaweed more palatable.

Electrons stay put in layers of mismatched 'quantum Legos'
2025-12-08

Electrons stay put in layers of mismatched 'quantum Legos'

Electrons can be elusive, but Cornell researchers using a new computational method can now account for where they go—or don't go—in certain layered materials.

Nano water droplet technology removes 99.9% of ultrafine dust in the air
2025-12-08

Nano water droplet technology removes 99.9% of ultrafine dust in the air

A KAIST research team has developed a new water-based air purification technology that combines nano water droplets that capture dust with a nano sponge structure that autonomously draws up water, enabling dust removal using nano water droplets without filters. It offers a self-supplied water operation with long-term, quiet, and safe performance.

Why can’t I wiggle my toes one at a time, like my fingers?
2025-12-08

Why can’t I wiggle my toes one at a time, like my fingers?

What muscles feet have, how your brain controls them, and how humans evolved all play a part in why people can’t easily move individual toes.

2025-12-08

CLINUVEL expands Singapore RD&I Centre to pioneer next-generation peptide therapies

EXECUTIVE SUMMARYVALLAURIX Research, Development & Innovation Centre to expand its existing facilities and capabilitiescore focus on accelerating development of liquid long-acting drug delivery platformsexisting RD&I teams will advance late-stage development programs without disruptionstrategic investment supported by the Singaporean Economic Development Board (EDB)five-year funded planMELBOURNE, Australia and SINGAPORE, Dec. 07, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- CLINUVEL PHARMACEUTICALS LTD today announced a significant expansion of its VALLAURIX Research, Development and Innovation (RD&I) Centre in Singapore. This strategic five-year investment solidifies the site's transition into a global hub for developing advanced, long-acting peptide formulations.Supported by the Singapore Economic Development Board (EDB), the enhanced facility will integrate comprehensive formulation and analytical sciences, focusing on advancing liquid controlled-release drug products designed to optimise therapeutic outcomes for patients. This expansion is a key pillar in CLINUVEL's strategy of vertical integration and innovation in peptide-based medicine.A Centre for Delivery InnovationThe VALLAURIX RD&I Centre is dedicated to creating novel pharmaceutical formulations that act as versatile platforms for delivering CLINUVEL's melanocortins and other therapeutic peptides, with a focus on advanced stage programs.Since its founding in 2014, the VALLAURIX site has evolved, with the current ISO9001-certified centre opening in 2020 and receiving extensive upgrades in 2022. The new expansion will further broaden its formulation and analytical capabilities, with full commissioning and certification targeted for FY2028.Commitment to Singapore and Global GrowthCLINUVEL's global team is spearheading the expansion, with plans to gradually increase specialist headcount in Singapore over the next five years. This growth is made possible through a strengthened economic partnership with the EDB, whose continued investment facilitates the addition of technical expertise and state-of-the-art capabilities."CLINUVEL has made a long-term investment in the VALLAURIX team and facility, which has resulted in important advancements in novel drug delivery systems," said Dr Dennis Wright, CLINUVEL's Chief Scientific Officer. "Our pipeline now includes platforms designed to optimise therapeutic dosing - delivering minimal, yet highly effective, levels of peptide in flexible formulations to better meet patient needs.A Future-Focused FacilityThe expansion process will ensure that ongoing projects in novel pharmaceutical and PhotoCosmetic formulation continue uninterrupted. Simultaneously, it prepares CLINUVEL to translate its research into tangible advanced therapies."We are ...Full story available on Benzinga.com

2025-12-08

Spore Buddies Announces Initiative Supporting Microscopy-Based Mycology Education

(MENAFN - Newsfile Corp)New York, New York--(Newsfile Corp. - December 8, 2025) - Spore Buddies announced an initiative focused on supporting scientific literacy through expanded access to ...

2025-12-08

Coinshares 2026 Outlook: Digital Assets Move From Disruption To Integration

(MENAFN - PR Newswire)Flagship Research report charts the rise of 'hybrid finance' as blockchain merges with traditional financial infrastructureSAINT HELIER, Jersey, Dec. 8, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- ...

2025-12-08

Median PFS Trending Beyond One Year: Leads Biolabs' LBL-034 Showcases Breakthrough Clinical Data in Oral Presentation at the 2025 ASH Annual Meeting

NANJING, China, Dec. 7, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- From December 6 to 9, 2025, the 67th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Hematology ("ASH") was held in Orlando, Florida, USA. Nanjing Leads Biolabs Co., Ltd. ("Leads Biolabs" or the "Company",...

LOOKING BACK: Map system made finding rural residences easier
2025-12-07

LOOKING BACK: Map system made finding rural residences easier

We use city directories in our collection to answer many research questions, such as who lived where and when, or where a business was located, say in 1931. They were arranged alphabetically, and by street, and by business category.

New cosmic lensing test sharpens the Hubble tension and hints at new physics
2025-12-07

New cosmic lensing test sharpens the Hubble tension and hints at new physics

New analysis of quasar time delays points to a faster-expanding universe, making the gap with early-universe predictions harder to dismiss.

Prime Medicine Announces The New England Journal of Medicine Publication of PM359 Clinical ...
2025-12-07

Prime Medicine Announces The New England Journal of Medicine Publication of PM359 Clinical ...

CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Dec. 07, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Prime Medicine, Inc. (Nasdaq: PRME), a biotechnology company committed to delivering a new class of differentiated one-time curative genetic therapies, today announced the publication of Phase 1/2 clinical data with PM359, the...

Scientists sent a menstrual cup to space. This is how it went
2025-12-07

Scientists sent a menstrual cup to space. This is how it went

Most astronauts who menstruate pause their cycle with hormones before hitting the stars, but in the future, we'll need more options.