sumi.news
  • Search
  • Following
  • Sign in
← Back to news

Science RSS Feed

  • sumi.news
  • Science

  • Latest
  • Fri Mar 27

A tiny twist and synthetic diamond put superconductivity on a switch, opening a new route to lossless electronics

2w
P

Recent advances in the precise nanoscale construction of g-C₃N₄ catalysts

2w
P

A cheaper, more sustainable way to manufacture breakthrough HIV drug Lenacapavir

2w
P

Fluoride in U.S. drinking water does not reduce IQ, a new study finds

2w
Science NewsS

Improved weather forecasts could reduce heat deaths as climate warms

2w
P

Lost village on Yorkshire hill may hold secret to long-term prosperity

2w
P

Two Supermassive Black Holes Are on a Cosmic Collision Course

2w
NautilusN

Cracking a 16-year proton mystery as ultra-precise hydrogen measurements confirm a smaller-than-expected core

2w
P

Lost seal of Edward the Confessor resurfaces after going missing for 40 years

2w
P

What fish redistribution in the Mediterranean is telling us about species' climate resilience

2w
P

Beyond blunders: British political studies and successful public policy

2w
P

See and hear galaxies evolve from the dawn of the universe

2w
P

AI maps 20,000 everyday interactions to reveal how social situations are structured

2w
P

We’ve caught a comet switching its spin direction for the first time

2w
New ScientistN

Efforts to end child marriage in Malawi leave out local knowledge, culture, research finds

2w
P

First Proba-3 science: Surprisingly speedy solar wind found in inner corona

2w
P

Mount Etna breaks volcano rules, tapping 80-kilometer-deep magma in a rare fourth category of eruption

2w
P

AI pricing could mean everyone pays a different price

2w
P

Future-proofing livestock vaccines by anticipating viruses' next moves

2w
P

Program helps couples face challenges together

2w
P

Link between pollinators and diverse landscapes is a two-way street

2w
P

Ultrasound creates light inside the body, opening a new path to targeted treatments

2w
P

The sun is tearing an asteroid to pieces, and Earth is now flying through the fallout

2w
P

Dead leaves now linger longer in Veluwe forests as acidic soils suppress decay

2w
P

Talking dogs and chatty cats could one day ‘speak’ in our language

2w
Science NewsS

Solid Proof That Our Mammal Ancestors Laid Eggs

2w
NautilusN

In Arizona's desert, tiny ants turn into living hygienists, climbing inside bigger ants' mandibles and cleaning them

2w
P

A counterintuitive molecular behavior opens new possibilities for cancer radiotherapy

2w
P

Person functionally cured of HIV after bone marrow transplant from sibling

2w
Scientific AmericanS

From curiosity to conservation: How citizen science is teaching children and adults to see, experience nature

2w
P

A tabletop ring of atoms brings the universe's doomsday vacuum collapse into the lab

2w
P

Powerful imaging pulls lost ocean life from 445-million-year-old stone and exposes a hidden extinction record

2w
P

The moon just got a new scar

2w
P

Revived Nubian royal robes shed light on prestige and authority in a lost Christian kingdom

2w
P

Always on, always stressed: Digital work tools may blur boundaries and harm well-being

2w
P

Between eternal night and day, the faces of two cousins of Earth

2w
P

Fatou, the world's oldest gorilla living in captivity, celebrates her 69th birthday at Berlin Zoo

2w
P

The AI Revolution in Math Has Arrived

2w
Quanta MagazineQ

Space worms! A microscopic crew goes into orbit to support future moon missions

2w
P

Africa’s forests have flipped from carbon sink to carbon source

2w

As Artemis II is celebrated, the world faces hard questions about US leadership in space

2w
P

Dream Chaser space plane faces uncertain future in NASA’s push for the moon

2w
Scientific AmericanS

'Ghost tunnels' guide sound waves in one direction while staying invisible to others

2w
P

Can weight loss help short-muzzled dogs breathe easier?

2w
P

New toothpaste stops gum disease without killing good bacteria

2w

Collapse of key ocean current may release billions of tonnes of carbon

2w
New ScientistN

The man who crawls into the perilous heart of the Chernobyl reactor

2w
New ScientistN

Chernobyl at 40: The man with the most dangerous job on Earth

2w
New ScientistN

My life as a meteorologist in Chernobyl under Russian occupation

2w
New ScientistN

Chernobyl at 40: My life as a meteorologist under Russian occupation

2w
New ScientistN
More →

Entries updated Apr 27, 2026 03:15:01 PM PDT

Questions? Suggestions? alex@sumi.news