Different Science Different Science
Butler prescient science Live Scientific research Earth International Space Station Scientific research Information brain signals cells patrols


Scientists Say: Excitation

Scientists Say: Excitation

nitrogen: A colorless, odorless and nonreactive gaseous element that forms about 78 percent of Earth's atmosphere.


Rare, mystery blasts from sun can devastate the ozone layer and spike radiation levels on Earth

Rare, mystery blasts from sun can devastate the ozone layer and spike radiation levels on Earth

His research is characterised by multi-disciplinary approaches combining information from areas such as climate change, geology, archaeology, microbiology, and anthropology to generate novel methods to study evolution, population genetics, medical science and conservation.


The best new science fiction books of July 2024

The best new science fiction books of July 2024

This short story collection will give us a “kaleidoscopic view of the climate crisis”, promises its publisher, moving from a boy trying to bring the natural world back to his urban life to a ballet dancer trying to inhabit the consciousness of a rat (at this stage, it isn’t clear why – but I’m keen to find out).


Alien ‘warp drives’ may leave telltale signals in the fabric of space-time, new paper claims

Alien ‘warp drives’ may leave telltale signals in the fabric of space-time, new paper claims

"Any matter moving around in an irregular way can potentially create gravitational waves," study co-author Katy Clough, a theoretical physicist at Queen Mary University of London, told Live Science in an email.


‘Do I Know You?’ explores face blindness and the science of the mind

‘Do I Know You?’ explores face blindness and the science of the mind

She volunteers for research studies, undergoes brain scans, takes vision tests, plays virtual reality games and scores a beeper that she wears for a few hours each week, intermittently prompting her to record every bit of her conscious experience.


The hacker turned politician using digital tech to reimagine democracy

The hacker turned politician using digital tech to reimagine democracy

After the first covid-19 cases were declared in mainland China in late 2019, she became a central player in the Taiwanese government’s response as a cabinet member for digital affairs.


Some people have never gotten COVID-19. An obscure gene may be why

Some people have never gotten COVID-19. An obscure gene may be why

The results stem from a challenge trial: At the height of the pandemic in 2021, scientists in the United Kingdom exposed 36 young, healthy unvaccinated volunteers who’d never gotten COVID-19 to the virus through their noses (SN: 2/18/21).


Baby-led weaning makes little nutritional difference vs spoon-feeding

Baby-led weaning makes little nutritional difference vs spoon-feeding

The researchers found no significant differences in daily energy intake – as defined by the number of calories consumed per kilogram of the baby’s body weight – at any point between the groups.


Pierce’s disease still plagues California wine country

Pierce’s disease still plagues California wine country

It is published by the Society for Science, a nonprofit 501(c)(3) membership organization dedicated to public engagement in scientific research and education (EIN 53-0196483).


Neanderthal child may have had Down’s syndrome

Neanderthal child may have had Down’s syndrome

A fossil bone displaying features consistent with Down’s syndrome belonged to a Neanderthal child who survived beyond 6 years old, adding to evidence that these extinct humans cared for members of their community


How powdered rock could help slow climate change

How powdered rock could help slow climate change

And from Michigan to Mississippi, farmers are scattering volcanic rock dust on their wheat, soy and corn fields with ag spreaders typically reserved for dispersing crushed limestone to adjust soil acidity.


Moss that survives deep freeze and radiation could live on Mars

Moss that survives deep freeze and radiation could live on Mars

Syntrichia caninervis is widespread in some of Earth’s harshest locations, including Tibet and Antarctica, so Xiaoshuang Li at the Xinjiang Institute of Ecology and Geography in Urumqi, China, and his colleagues decided to subject it to a brutal suite of tests to discover just how much it could survive.