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  • Tue Aug 19

Child obesity is now more common than undernutrition – what do we do?

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New ScientistN

Synthetic magnetic fields steer light on a chip for faster communications

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Phys.orgP

Who shows up in times of need? High school extracurriculars offer clues

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Phys.orgP

Researchers reveal molecular assembly and efficient light harvesting of largest eukaryotic photosystem complex

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Phys.orgP

Laser reveals sound from supersonic molecules in near-space cold conditions

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Phys.orgP

Planets without plate tectonics and too little carbon dioxide could mean that technological alien life is rare

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Phys.orgP

Recycled glass could help fend off coastal erosion

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Science NewsS

Amino acids act as 'anti-salt': New insight into how small molecules stabilize proteins

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Phys.orgP

Scientists respond to the planned termination of the only U.S. Antarctic research vessel

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Phys.orgP

Intimate partner violence services fall short for women with disabilities, says researcher

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Phys.orgP

Opposing the 'inevitability' of AI in academia is both possible and necessary, argue researchers

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Phys.orgP

Where did the interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS come from?

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Phys.orgP

Seeds of change: Can Europe's organic farming shape the future of food?

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Phys.orgP

Scientists made a biological quantum bit out of a fluorescent protein

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Science NewsS

Survey across the Global South sheds new light on support for climate policies

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Phys.orgP

Models explain mysterious feature controlling magnetic properties of the sun

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Phys.orgP

Chemists weigh in on hydrogen water

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Phys.orgP

A Single, ‘Naked’ Black Hole Rewrites the History of the Universe

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Quanta MagazineQ

How lactate defends cells under stress

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Phys.orgP

A pollution paradox: Wildfires in the western United States may improve air quality

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Phys.orgP

The real reason ice is slippery, revealed after 200 years

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Microscopes can now watch materials go quantum with liquid helium

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Phys.orgP

Ultra-flat optic pushes beyond what was previously thought possible

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Phys.orgP

Atom-thin crystals provide new way to power the future of computer memory

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Phys.orgP

Team discovers potential bacterial solution to 'forever' chemicals

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Phys.orgP

Mysterious 'red dots' in early universe may be 'black hole star' atmospheres

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Phys.orgP

Hedonistic habits could turn you into a mosquito magnet

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New ScientistN

Want to avoid mosquito bites? Step away from the beer

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Science NewsS

Forensic Expert Explains How 3D Laser Scanning Could Reconstruct the Charlie Kirk Shooting

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Scientific AmericanS

Why Charlie Kirk's killing could embolden political violence

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Phys.orgP

From the Great Stink to the modern sewage scandal: Why 19th-century sewers are failing 21st-century England

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Phys.orgP

Private toll roads are supposed to save taxpayers' money, but can have these hidden costs

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Phys.orgP

Stored for 130 years: Bottles reveal evidence of Danish butter production and hygiene practices of the past

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Phys.orgP

NSW has a new fashion sector strategy—but a sustainable industry needs a federally legislated response

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Phys.orgP

Cleansed, toned and tariffed: What's happening to K-beauty in the US?

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Phys.orgP

Graphene just broke a fundamental law of physics

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For too long, colonial language has dominated space exploration: Is there a better way?

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Phys.orgP

Lakeshore shallows can be biodiversity hotspots—but warming is changing their complex ecology

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Phys.orgP

Scientists capture elusive liquid carbon — a diamond in disguise

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One daily habit could save you from chronic back pain

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Is Intermittent Fasting Helpful or Harmful?

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Scientific AmericanS

Trilayer moiré superlattices unlock tunable control of exciton configurations

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Phys.orgP

Getting to the root of tree survival

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Phys.orgP

NASA’s JWST Hunts Dark Matter in Stunning Image of Bullet Cluster

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Scientific AmericanS

'Enormous' mountain on Pacific seafloor rivals Rocky Mountain peaks, NOAA says

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Phys.orgP

This star is consuming its companion and could explode brilliantly

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Phys.orgP

Dallas scientist wins 'America's Nobel' for research into 'ugly duckling' proteins

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Phys.orgP

Messy backyard gardens could help save biodiversity, but who wants one?

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Phys.orgP

Return to pre-COVID routines has brought Atlanta unhealthier air

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Phys.orgP

Jupiter is smaller and more squashed than we thought

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New ScientistN
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Entries updated Sep 18, 2025 08:16:15 PM PDT

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