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Extreme weather could disrupt China's renewable energy boom

New Scientist Feed - Thu, 04/03/2025 - 3:00am
As China’s vast electrical grid relies more on wind, solar and hydropower, it faces a growing risk of power shortages due to bad weather – and that could encourage the use of coal plants
Categories: Science

Studying Uranian Moons using Passive Radar Sounding

Universe Today Feed - Wed, 04/02/2025 - 8:58pm

How can Uranus be used to indirectly study its moons and identify if they possess subsurface oceans? This is what a recent study presented at the 56th Lunar and Planetary Science Conference hopes to address as a team of scientists investigated using passive radar sounding methods from Uranus to study its five largest moons: Miranda, Ariel, Umbriel, Titania, and Oberon. This study has the potential to help researchers better understand the formation and evolution of Uranus and its largest moons despite a spacecraft not currently visiting Uranus.

Categories: Science

Galaxies Were Already Dying Just 700 Million Years After the Big Bang

Universe Today Feed - Wed, 04/02/2025 - 5:13pm

When galaxies run out of primordial hydrogen and helium, they cease star formation, shifting to primarily long-lived red stars. These galaxies are considered "red and dead." It usually takes billions of years for galaxies to run out of hydrogen, but now astronomers using JWST have found examples of galaxies that have already stopped forming stars just 700 million years after the Big Bang, much earlier than predicted by cosmological models.

Categories: Science

Scientists merge two 'impossible' materials into new artificial structure

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Wed, 04/02/2025 - 5:08pm
An international team has merged two lab-synthesized materials into a synthetic quantum structure once thought impossible to exist and produced an exotic structure expected to provide insights that could lead to new materials at the core of quantum computing.
Categories: Science

Scientists merge two 'impossible' materials into new artificial structure

Computers and Math from Science Daily Feed - Wed, 04/02/2025 - 5:08pm
An international team has merged two lab-synthesized materials into a synthetic quantum structure once thought impossible to exist and produced an exotic structure expected to provide insights that could lead to new materials at the core of quantum computing.
Categories: Science

The best retro games console is the one you played at age 10

New Scientist Feed - Wed, 04/02/2025 - 1:00pm
Nostalgia for video games seems to be strongest for those played during childhood – at least for Nintendo Switch players
Categories: Science

Students Designed a Mission to Venus on the Cheap

Universe Today Feed - Wed, 04/02/2025 - 12:45pm

Sometimes, the best way to learn how to do something is just to do it. That is especially true if you're learning to do something using a specific methodology. And in some cases, the outcome of your efforts is something that's interesting to other people. A team from across the European Union, led by PhD candidate Domenico D'Auria, spent a few days last September performing just such an exercise - and their work resulted in a mission architecture known as the Planetary Exploration Deployment and Research Operation - Venus, or PEDRO-V.

Categories: Science

Perseverance is Trying Out Spacesuit Materials on Mars

Universe Today Feed - Wed, 04/02/2025 - 12:04pm

NASA's Perseverance Rover is an ambitious mission. Along with its day-to-day exploration, the rover carried an experimental rotorcraft and is also caching samples for eventual return to Earth. But there's another aspect to its mission that's hidden in the glare of its ambitions. The rover is busy testing five different spacesuit materials.

Categories: Science

Scientists unveil starfish-inspired wearable tech for heart monitoring

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Wed, 04/02/2025 - 11:23am
When we move, it's harder for existing wearable devices to accurately track our heart activity. But researchers found that a starfish's five-arm shape helps solve this problem. Inspired by how a starfish flips itself over -- shrinking one of its arms and using the others in a coordinated motion to right itself -- scientists have created a starfish-shaped wearable device that tracks heart health in real time.
Categories: Science

Scientists unveil starfish-inspired wearable tech for heart monitoring

Computers and Math from Science Daily Feed - Wed, 04/02/2025 - 11:23am
When we move, it's harder for existing wearable devices to accurately track our heart activity. But researchers found that a starfish's five-arm shape helps solve this problem. Inspired by how a starfish flips itself over -- shrinking one of its arms and using the others in a coordinated motion to right itself -- scientists have created a starfish-shaped wearable device that tracks heart health in real time.
Categories: Science

Ice-monitoring drones set for first tests in the Arctic

New Scientist Feed - Wed, 04/02/2025 - 11:00am
High-speed drones will be put to the test in the extreme Arctic environment as part of a project to assess how quickly glaciers in Greenland are retreating
Categories: Science

Washed-up clothing mimics seaweed in stunning cyanotypes

New Scientist Feed - Wed, 04/02/2025 - 11:00am
Mandy Barker's new book, Photographs of British Algae: Cyanotype imperfections, highlights the ongoing ocean pollution crisis by echoing an influential 19th-century book
Categories: Science

A moving story reveals hidden human cost of drug trials

New Scientist Feed - Wed, 04/02/2025 - 11:00am
Drug trials are vital to medicine, but what of those taking part? Jennie Erin Smith's moving new book about what happened in a rural community hit by early-onset Alzheimer's disease gives them a voice
Categories: Science

A bestseller is born: How Zuckerberg discovered the Streisand Effect

New Scientist Feed - Wed, 04/02/2025 - 11:00am
Feedback is baffled – baffled! – as to why Facebook owner Meta's attempts to suppress a previous employee's memoir sent the book rocketing to the top of the book charts
Categories: Science

Why pilots are worried about plans to replace co-pilots with AI

New Scientist Feed - Wed, 04/02/2025 - 11:00am
A cost-cutting initiative in the world of passenger aviation could see flight-deck staff reduced to just a captain, with their co-pilot replaced by AI. It may save money, but it's a risk too far, argues Paul Marks
Categories: Science

Our drive for adventure and challenge has ancient origins

New Scientist Feed - Wed, 04/02/2025 - 11:00am
Why are some people drawn towards exploration and challenge – even to the point of extreme danger? Alex Hutchinson's bracing new book unpicks the complex reasons
Categories: Science

It is time to close the autism diagnosis gender gap

New Scientist Feed - Wed, 04/02/2025 - 11:00am
For decades, autistic women and girls have had to play "diagnostic bingo" before getting their true diagnosis. As new neuroscience offers a fresh understanding of the condition, the time for change is now
Categories: Science

Galaxies die earlier than expected

Space and time from Science Daily Feed - Wed, 04/02/2025 - 9:28am
For a long time, scientists thought that only actively star-forming galaxies should be observed in the very early Universe. The James Webb space telescope now reveals that galaxies stopped forming stars earlier than expected. A recent discovery deepens the tension between theoretical models of cosmic evolution and actual observations. Among hundreds of spectra obtained with the Webb program RUBIES, the team has found a record-breaking galaxy that had already stopped forming stars during an epoch where galaxies are normally growing very rapidly.
Categories: Science

Multi-resistance in bacteria predicted by AI model

Computers and Math from Science Daily Feed - Wed, 04/02/2025 - 9:28am
An AI model trained on large amounts of genetic data can predict whether bacteria will become antibiotic-resistant. The new study shows that antibiotic resistance is more easily transmitted between genetically similar bacteria and mainly occurs in wastewater treatment plants and inside the human body.
Categories: Science

Transducer could enable superconducting quantum networks

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Wed, 04/02/2025 - 9:28am
Applied physicists have created a photon router that could plug into quantum networks to create robust optical interfaces for noise-sensitive microwave quantum computers.
Categories: Science

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