sumi.news
Search
Following
Sign in
← Back to news
Science
RSS Feed
sumi.news
Science
Follow
Latest
Fri Apr 17
Graphene kills harmful bacteria “superbugs” but spares human cells
3w
Warming waters are supercharging an invasive salmon predator in Alaska
3w
Aggressive “hulk” lizards are wiping out millions of years of evolution
3w
Bonuses can lower self-set goals and reduce performance, experiment suggests
3w
P
Microfluidic device tracks cell 'squishiness' faster and more reliably than standard methods
3w
P
Australian farmers are battling another potential mouse plague—what is causing it?
3w
P
Forty years on from the disaster, why there are foxes, bears and bison again around Chernobyl
3w
P
Fluorescent probe lights up centrioles and cilia in living cells across species
3w
P
More shearwaters are washing up dead on Australian beaches. It's not due to 'natural' causes
3w
P
Venice is sinking. We analyzed every plan to save it, and none would preserve the city as we know it
3w
P
When the rain comes, some NYC subway riders stay home. Scientists are now mapping exactly who, and where
3w
P
Catalysis App: Structured research data for developing sustainable catalysts
3w
P
Before dinosaurs vanished, a hamster-sized mammal was already shaping what survived next on the Pacific Coast
3w
P
Contribution to Artemis II Moon mission sees successful test of a space camera under cosmic ray conditions
3w
P
More activity means less response in active materials
3w
P
Legacy preference bans may not increase college diversity, researchers say
3w
P
Scientists just discovered Africa is closer to breaking apart than we thought
3w
This life‑threatening bacterium's hidden motor just gave medicine an unexpected opening to fight back
3w
P
Harvard scientists link gut bacteria to depression through hidden inflammation trigger
3w
Don't just plant trees, plant forests to restore biodiversity for the future
3w
P
New “optical tornado” technology could transform quantum communication
3w
Studying the emergence of leaders in moving crowds of pedestrians
3w
P
This exotic particle could finally explain why matter has mass
3w
Century of data shows global decline in fish growth
3w
P
Gravitational waves may have created dark matter in the early universe
3w
Magnet with near-zero external field could reshape future electronics
3w
P
The platypus is even weirder than thought, scientists discover
3w
P
How accelerating evolution could help corals survive future heat waves—new study
3w
P
Giant octopuses may have ruled the oceans 100 million years ago
3w
Saturday Citations: Cruise ship pathogen spread in ancient Rome; Plus: Pomegranates, retinal implants
3w
P
Inside 18 years of ape minds, a vast record that may upend how human intelligence began
3w
P
‘Bat feast’ animal videos at African cave offer clues to how deadly viruses spread
3w
S
Can electric air taxis carry passengers? Vertical Aerospace’s VX4 just cleared a key test
3w
S
Mollusk shells could pave the way to greener materials
3w
S
Giant prehistoric insects didn’t need high oxygen after all, study finds
3w
Scientists just found what keeps plant cells from growing out of control
3w
Can jarrah forests be recovered after bauxite mining?
3w
P
The most energetic neutrino ever detected could be primordial
3w
P
Low wages, poor training put security guards—and the public—at risk, study finds
3w
P
Education saves lives: New study reveals global link between learning and longevity
3w
P
New study reveals how video games support children's well-being
3w
P
Chernobyl's exclusion zone is a beacon of biodiversity—but it faces new threats from Russia's invasion
3w
P
Neutrinos caught on camera: Testing the first prototype of a new elementary particle detector
3w
P
El Niño season predicted to start as early as next month
3w
P
High-resolution imaging shines light on nanoscale nuclear organization
3w
P
Light near surface of ultra-thin optical fibers can sort twisted nanoparticles
3w
P
Why Volcanoes Sometimes Shoot Out Lightning
3w
N
Re-engineered human cells boost gene-editing particle potency across multiple delivery systems
3w
P
Bipartisan-cited science is rarely used by policymakers, study finds
3w
P
Light-activated electrolyte oxidizes water to promote tumor cell death
3w
P
More →