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First ever atomic movie reveals hidden driver of radiation damage

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 03/24/2026 - 8:53pm
Researchers have visualized atoms in motion just before a radiation-driven decay process occurs, revealing a surprisingly dynamic scene. Instead of remaining fixed, the atoms roam and rearrange, directly influencing how and when the decay unfolds. This “atomic movie” shows that structure and motion play a central role in radiation damage mechanisms. The findings could improve our understanding of how harmful radiation affects biological matter.
Categories: Science

Mars Plant Growth from Cyanobacteria-Based Fertilizer

Universe Today Feed - Tue, 03/24/2026 - 8:21pm

You’re the Lead Botanist on the third human mission to Mars whose primary job involves growing food for the crew throughout the long mission. While you’re very familiar with the infamous “poop potatoes” from the 2025 film The Martian, the greatest minds in science had since devised a more efficient, and less messy, method for growing food on Mars: cyanobacteria.

Categories: Science

This tiny implant, smaller than a grain of salt, can read your brain

Computers and Math from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 03/24/2026 - 7:23pm
A new neural implant is so small it can rest on a grain of salt, yet it can track and wirelessly transmit brain activity for over a year. It’s powered by laser light that safely passes through tissue and communicates using tiny infrared signals. This ultra-miniature device could transform how scientists study the brain without invasive wiring.
Categories: Science

NASA Lays Out Ambitious Plans for Moon Base and Nuclear Mars Mission

Universe Today Feed - Tue, 03/24/2026 - 6:21pm

NASA has outlined an ambitious strategy to start working on a moon base and send a nuclear-powered spacecraft to Mars by the end of 2028 — leading some observers to wonder whether the timeline was realistic or wise.

Categories: Science

Extragalactic Archaeology: A New Method To Understand Galaxy Growth and Evolution

Universe Today Feed - Tue, 03/24/2026 - 1:07pm

Galactic archaeology uses chemical fingerprints in the Milky Way to trace its formation and evolution. Now a team of researchers led by the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard and Smithsonian have employed it for the first time in a distant galaxy. This is the first example of extragalactic archaeology, and it relies on help from the powerful Illustris TNG simulations.

Categories: Science

Earth may have formed from two separate rings around the sun

New Scientist Feed - Tue, 03/24/2026 - 11:00am
Our solar system’s rocky planets – Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars – may have formed from two rings around the young sun, rather than a single disc
Categories: Science

Cystitis or tooth decay could trigger dementia just a few years later

New Scientist Feed - Tue, 03/24/2026 - 11:00am
Infections are increasingly being linked to a higher risk of dementia. In the latest research, scientists have found that being treated in hospital for a severe infection seems to raise the risk of developing the condition over the next five to six years
Categories: Science

We Are Slowing Down the Planet

Universe Today Feed - Tue, 03/24/2026 - 10:07am

The days are getting longer. Not by much though since we're talking about fractions of a millisecond, but the rate at which our planet is slowing down is, according to a new study, completely without precedent in the last 3.6 million years. The culprit isn't the Moon, the Sun or anything in Earth's interior. It's us, homo sapiens.

Categories: Science

Watching 25 Years of Expansion in the Crab Nebula With the Hubble

Universe Today Feed - Tue, 03/24/2026 - 9:54am

A quarter-century after its first observations of the full Crab Nebula, NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope has taken a fresh look at the supernova remnant. The result is an unparalleled, detailed look at the aftermath of a supernova and how it has evolved over Hubble’s long lifetime. A paper detailing the new Hubble observation was published in The Astrophysical Journal.

Categories: Science

The Time Capsule in the Salt Flat

Universe Today Feed - Tue, 03/24/2026 - 9:39am

High in the Chilean Andes, at an altitude where the air is thin and the Sun is intense, a salt flat is hiding something remarkable. Locked inside ancient crystals of gypsum are the preserved remains of microscopic life, fossils of organisms that lived thousands of years ago, sitting alongside communities of microbes that are alive right now. Scientists studying this extraordinary place think it could be the closest thing on Earth to where life might once have existed on Mars.

Categories: Science

When Atoms Hear the Universe Ripple

Universe Today Feed - Tue, 03/24/2026 - 9:09am

Detecting gravitational waves has always demanded enormous machines; kilometre scale instruments capable of sensing distortions smaller than a proton. But a new theoretical study suggests the universe may have been leaving its calling card in the light emitted by individual atoms. If the idea holds up, the future of gravitational wave detection might not be sprawling observatories carved into the landscape, but something you could hold in the palm of your hand.

Categories: Science

The shocking fossils that show T. rex wasn't the king of the dinosaurs

New Scientist Feed - Tue, 03/24/2026 - 9:00am
We've always thought that Tyrannosaurus rex was an unchallenged apex predator during the dying days of the dinosaurs. But a fresh look at controversial fossils has prompted palaeontology’s biggest-ever U-turn
Categories: Science

Antimatter has been transported by road for the first time

New Scientist Feed - Tue, 03/24/2026 - 6:30am
CERN is working on building an antimatter delivery service. The project passed a big test by successfully transporting 92 antiprotons around a 4-kilometre loop of road
Categories: Science

Spacecraft Heat Shields Could Violently "Burst" When Plunging Into Alien Atmospheres

Universe Today Feed - Tue, 03/24/2026 - 6:24am

Heat shield design is one of the most critical aspects of missions that plan to either land on a planet’s (or moon’s) surface or return to our own. Spacecraft that have to survive the fiery, hypersonic plunge through an atmosphere require these systems. For decades, heat shields have been designed to slowly burn away in a process called ablation, which is intended to dissipate the incredible thermal energy or reentry. But, there’s another, less understood phenomenon that affects them too - spallation, where a heat shield sheds material in violent, unpredictable “bursts”. This second mode of destruction seems to be particularly prevalent in oxygen-deprived atmospheres, like that of Titan, where the Dragonfly helicopter plans to land in the not too distant future. A new paper published in Carbon from researchers at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign (UIUC) performed some tests showing just how different those heat shields might need to be.

Categories: Science

What Happened to Comet 3I/Atlas

neurologicablog Feed - Tue, 03/24/2026 - 6:01am

Last year the inner solar system had an interstellar visitor – 3I/Atlas (which stands for the third interstellar object which was discovered by the Atlas telescope). The third ever of anything is by definition a rare event, and so this was scientifically exciting. The comet came into the inner solar system, passing close to Jupiter and Mars, but not to the Earth, went behind the sun, then emerged on its path away from the sun. It is now headed for the orbit of Jupiter and out of the solar system. At first 3I/Atlas displayed a number of minor anomalies. It was behaving sort of like a comet, but with some differences. This fits well, however, with the main hypothesis that it is an interstellar comet – so it’s a comet, but may have a different composition from comets that were formed in our own solar system. This is not almost certainly the case – the comet comes from the thick disc of the galaxy, likely from a low metallicity star system, and has likely been travelling through interstellar space for billions of years, possibly being even older than our own star.

Now that it is passing out of the solar system we can look at all the data that NASA collected and make some fairly confident conclusions. There are a lot of sources of information, but Wikipedia actually has a pretty good summary and list of references. In the end, 3I/Atlas behaved mostly like a typical comet. It formed a tail heading away from the sun, brightened as it got close, then faded away as it moved away from the sun. Spectral analysis found that the comet was unusually rich in carbon dioxide (CO2), with small amounts of water ice, water vapor, carbon monoxide (CO), and carbonyl sulfide (OCS). It also had small amounts of cyanide and nickel gas, which is common in comets from our own solar system. In other words – it is a comet. It did originate from a part of the sky that we had previously calculated would have fewer such interstellar objects, which either makes it especially rare or means that our calculations are off.

Every time we encounter a new interstellar object we gather more data about such objects – how frequent are they, where do they come from, and what is their nature. Right now we have just three data points. After the first one, Oumuamua, we had not idea how common they were because we had just one data point. Now we have enough instruments surveying the sky that we are better able to detect such objects, which are very fleeting. The question was – was Oumuamua a one-off, and we just got lucky to detect something that happens very rarely, or are such objects common. We now have three data points and can conclude that they are fairly common, and we should detect one every few years or so, perhaps even more often if we start looking more.

Interstellar objects are a fairly new astronomical phenomenon, and what typically happens to new astronomical phenomena is that someone asks – could this be an alien artifact? So far the answer has been universally, no. The universe is a very big and complex place with lots of unusual phenomena. Historically speaking we have only just started to examine the cosmos, and are still encountering new phenomena on a regular basis. We have yet, however, to detect anything demonstrably, or even likely, alien. No one would be more excited than me if we discovered a genuine technosignature of an alien civilization. That is precisely why we have to be very careful before leaping to any such conclusions. But sure, ask the question, just don’t leap off the deep end.

What I mean by that is – do not make bad arguments to prop up an alien hypothesis, do not mystery-monger, do not truck in conspiracy theories, and do not draw undue attention to such speculation or present it as anything other than speculation. Every generation seems to have someone, sometimes with a scientific background, who does all of these things. The allure of the alien hypothesis is just too great. It is genuinely fascinating. It is the fast track to fame and attention. You can portray yourself as just being open-minded, brave enough to ask the tough questions, and criticize your colleagues for being closed-minded. Of course, like many things, this is a continuum. A little  is reasonable, more starts to get sketchy, and a lot makes you a crank.

An example of something which I consider to be in the sweet spot of good scientific exploration of the possibility of alien technosignatures is SETI. SETI essentially uses radioastronomy to survey for potential radio signals of alien origin. But they are not just doing this – they are also doing lots of ordinary good radio astronomy. But mixed in with their radio astronomy are methods to screen for signals that might be technosignatures. They are also extremely careful not to make any premature or overblown claims, and they are their own most dedicated skeptics.

At the other end of the spectrum, in my opinion, is Avi Loeb. He has seemed to make a career now out of mystery mongering anything unusual as a possible alien artifact. He claimed that all three interstellar objects might be alien craft. Why is he at the crank end of the spectrum? Because he elevated this possibility prematurely and with a series of really bad arguments, sometimes distorting the data or making bad calculations. He said that Oumuamua might be alien because it was coming close to the Earth, to observe it. He then argued that 3I/Atlas might be alien because it was not coming close to the Earth, to hide from us. He exaggerated its possible size, its apparent lack of a tail, its composition. He made a lot of the fact that the comet’s trajectory is close to the ecliptic, about 5 degrees off, committing a classic lottery fallacy argument. He calculated how likely this specific feature is, but only after knowing it, and did not adjust for all possible features that might be individually unlikely. He engaged in classic post-hoc reasoning. In the end, the predictions of NASA scientists all proved correct – 3I/Atlas is a comet, and displays all the features of a comet. Loeb attracted attention by saying 3I/Atlas might pivot toward the Earth once it emerges from behind the sun. When this prediction failed he did admit it was “most likely natural”, but is still emphasizing its apparent anomalies.

What he is doing is playing coy, which is a common strategy for those who are pushing fringe ideas but who are trying to seem reasonable. All along he said – the most likely explanation is that it is natural. But then follows up with – here are lots of (really bad) reasons why it is unusual and might be alien. This is a win-win for him – in the rare case that he turns out to be right, he is a genius and takes all the credit (keep in mind, if it were alien NASA would have found out all by themselves, with his prodding). If it turns out he is wrong, then he can claim he said all along it was likely to be natural. Either way he sucks up as much oxygen as possible from the media and distracts from the hard-working scientists at NASA doing good work. There is some great and interesting science here. The conclusion that this is almost certainly not an alien craft is a footnote at best, because there was never any good reason to hypothesize that it was.

Loeb is at it again (or still) with a recent post about a “mysterious” Mars cylinder (see the picture above the fold). This is also a common strategy of mystery mongers – comb through tons of data looking for anything unusual, then declare it a mystery. Again – looking for anomalies is a legitimate process of science. Blowing up apparent anomalies into a high-priority mystery is something that an attention-seeking crank would do. In this case others combed through NASA pictures from the Rover and then send it along to Loeb, so he is now a magnet for such things. And again – he admits this is most likely to be just a piece of debris from the Rover itself, or its landing, or whatever. There is now debris on Mars from all the spacecraft we have sent from Earth, so when we encounter a bit of what looks like ordinary debris, that is most likely what it is.

But Loeb is saying that NASA should turn the rover around and travel a few days to go back and take a closer look at this debris. NASA has not responded or commented to Loeb’s statement. This is actually a good operational definition of making too much of an apparent anomaly. Thinking that such anomalies, even when they are likely mundane, should take high priority and redirect our limited resources away from other scientific priorities, is worse than grabbing attention. It is trying to commandeer precious public resources to go on your own wild-goose chases, not because it is good science, but because it serves your own personal agenda.  NASA is perfectly capable of determining the proper priorities for their own rover. They don’t have to go chasing after every piece of space junk because Loeb is trying to grab attention and justify his own dubious professional existence.

The post What Happened to Comet 3I/Atlas first appeared on NeuroLogica Blog.

Categories: Skeptic

How AI shook the world's largest meeting of physicists

New Scientist Feed - Tue, 03/24/2026 - 6:00am
Physicists are grappling with how the increasing presence of AI will change the nature of their profession
Categories: Science

Supercomputers just solved a 50-year-old mystery about giant stars

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 03/24/2026 - 4:52am
Astronomers have finally cracked a decades-old mystery about red giant stars—how material from their deep interiors makes its way to the surface. Using cutting-edge supercomputer simulations, researchers discovered that stellar rotation plays a powerful role in mixing elements across a previously unexplained barrier inside the star.
Categories: Science

Supercomputers just solved a 50-year-old mystery about giant stars

Space and time from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 03/24/2026 - 4:52am
Astronomers have finally cracked a decades-old mystery about red giant stars—how material from their deep interiors makes its way to the surface. Using cutting-edge supercomputer simulations, researchers discovered that stellar rotation plays a powerful role in mixing elements across a previously unexplained barrier inside the star.
Categories: Science

Adrian Tchaikovsky: 'I try and do interesting aliens'

New Scientist Feed - Tue, 03/24/2026 - 4:00am
As the science fiction author publishes the latest novel in his Children of Time series, Children of Strife, he talks to Alison Flood about mantis shrimp, the pleasures of sci-fi and why empathy is so important in his writing
Categories: Science

Are humans degenerating genetically and getting dumber as a result?

New Scientist Feed - Tue, 03/24/2026 - 2:00am
Are we evolving to be more stupid? Humans have a relatively high genetic mutation rate, which has been thought to be driving down our physical and mental fitness – but columnist Michael Le Page finds these mutations aren’t the health risk some make them out to be
Categories: Science

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