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

Science RSS Feed

  • sumi.news
  • Science

  • Latest
  • Tue May 5

How Rachel Carson's Silent Spring changed the world in 1962

14h
New ScientistN

SpaceX seeks a record $75 bn in stock market debut

15h
P

From introvert to hero: The 'Hacker' revealed

15h
P

Photoexcitation flips 2D moiré devices from metals to insulators in ultrafast test

16h
P

Detection at the nanoscale: A phosphate-detecting electrochemical sensor

16h
P

Humans conquered the planet 300 times faster than genetic evolution can explain

16h
Scientific AmericanS

Search for alien technology on interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS comes up empty

17h
Scientific AmericanS

Scientists discover the master clock that controls biological growth and development

17h

Tools to fight hantavirus show promise despite limited funding. Now researchers hope to continue

17h
P

SpaceX's IPO is set to be the biggest ever and could make Elon Musk a trillionaire

18h
P

New gold-palladium catalysis mechanism could advance bio-based chemical manufacturing

18h
P

Stonehenge's altar stone probably wasn't transported by a glacier

18h
New ScientistN

Screwworm fly detected in Texas decades after cattle threat was largely eradicated in US

18h
P

Canadian government endorses a plan to move whales from shuttered Marineland park to US and Spain

18h
P

Stonehenge Altar Stone's epic transportation across ancient Britain detailed in new study

19h
P

Beluga whales keep switching mates and it may be saving their species

19h

Scientists discover a quantum effect that could eliminate batteries

19h

Cancer’s favorite escape trick may actually make it easier to kill

21h

NASA's Webb detects methane and strange chemistry on interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS

21h

Moms' learned fear of snakes gets inherited by offspring in a critically endangered mouse, biologists discover

23h
P

Reconnecting the last wild landscapes of the Javan leopard

1d
P

Q&A: How approval processes drive up housing costs in major cities

1d
P

The next-generation Very Large Array prototype gathers its first light

1d
P

Great apes: What we know about their cognition, cooperation and curiosity after two decades of research

1d
P

White House reclassifies federal epidemiologists and other scientists from civil servants to ‘at-will’ hires

1d
Scientific AmericanS

Asteroid dirt is 'fluffier' than we thought

1d
P

Species of Brazilian moths described in honor of Orixás, foundational deities of Afro-Brazilian religions

1d
P

Hybrid work is not always the golden compromise employees expect—even as more companies implement it

1d
P

Monitoring reveals elevated antidepressant levels in some waterways

1d
P

Dynamic nanogates let longer molecules pass faster through flexible pores

1d
P

Q&A: Why scientists are studying a microbe they found in a sink

1d
P

Nitric oxide overload jams plant immune signals, researchers find

1d
P

A new capability to detect chemical weapons involves two existing methods

1d
P

Tanzania's iconic heritage sites face damage from state-backed tourism

1d
P

How methane policy will make or break the climate crisis

1d
P

How Jupiter may have redirected life's ingredients toward Earth 4.5 billion years ago

1d
P

Plants boost carbon uptake through water efficiency, not heat adaptation, global analysis reveals

1d
P

AI offers promise for agriculture, but smallholder farmers risk being left behind

1d
P

Interstellar object 3I/ATLAS reveals no technosignatures in seven-hour radio scan

1d
P

A very strong El Niño is approaching. Here's what we can expect

1d
P

Research could pave the way for more resilient winter cereals in warmer climates

1d
P

Japan's new seafloor record could sharpen megathrust earthquake warnings in Nankai Trough

1d
P

Why 'psychopath' is a dangerous label when it comes to criminal justice

1d
P

Thundering footsteps warn caterpillars of lethal ladybeetle attacks

1d
P

Watch How “Trashy” City Bowerbirds Attract Their Mates

1d
NautilusN

Why doesn't coffee taste like caffeine?

1d
P

PFAS in ski wax: Despite bans, these forever chemicals linger in wax rooms—so does their health risk

1d
P

Programmable chemistry unlocks drugs only in target cells, aiming to cut side effects

1d
P

Temperature gaps help sneeze clouds stay denser and travel farther, experiments show

1d
P

Water-wave tweezers steer tiny 'surfers' without touching them

1d
P
More →

Entries updated Jun 4, 2026 07:18:54 PM PDT

Questions? Suggestions? alex@sumi.news