Astronomy
Roman soldiers defending Hadrian’s Wall had intestinal parasites
Roman soldiers defending Hadrian’s Wall had intestinal parasites
Here’s How Much Practice You Need to Become the Best in the World
Are you a specialist or a generalist? The answer could reveal something about how well you learn and perfect a skill
NASA Lab Completes Engine Checks on New Aircraft
Two asteroids crashed around a nearby star, solving a cosmic mystery
Two asteroids crashed around a nearby star, solving a cosmic mystery
Luminous Fast Blue Optical Transients Are Likely Large Black Holes Shredding Their Massive Companions
In 2024, astronomers discovered the brightest Luminous Fast Blue Optical Transient (LFBOT) ever observed. LFBOTs are extremely bright flashes of blue light that shine for brief periods before fading away. New analysis of this record-breaking burst, which includes observations from the International Gemini Observatory, funded in part by the U.S. National Science Foundation, challenges all prior understanding of these rare explosive events.
The JWST Found A Jekyll-and-Hyde Galaxy In The Early Universe
In a glimpse of the early universe, astronomers have observed a galaxy as it appeared just 800 million years after the Big Bang – a cosmic Jekyll and Hyde that looks like any other galaxy when viewed in visible and even ultraviolet light but transforms into a cosmic beast when observed at infrared wavelengths. This object, dubbed Virgil, is forcing astronomers to reconsider their understanding of how supermassive black holes grew in the infant universe.
Closure of US institute will do immense harm to climate research
Closure of US institute will do immense harm to climate research
342nd Council: Media information session
Watch the replay of the media information session in which ESA Director General Josef Aschbacher and ESA Council Chair Renato Krpoun (CH) update journalists on key decisions taken at the ESA Council meeting, held at ESA Headquarters in Paris on 17 and 18 December 2025.
Trump Administration Moves to Severely Curtail Access to Gender-Affirming Care for Minors
Health officials on Thursday announced a slew of measures that seek to restrict access to gender-affirming health care for young transgender people in the U.S.
Sitting by a window may improve blood sugar levels for type 2 diabetes
Sitting by a window may improve blood sugar levels for type 2 diabetes
Using Bent Light to Map Complex Planetary Architectures
With new technologies comes new discoveries. Or so Spider Man’s Uncle Ben might have said if he was an astronomer. Or a scientist more generally - but in astronomy that saying is more true than many other disciplines, as many discoveries are entirely dependent on the technology - the telescope, imager, or processing algorithm, used to collect data on them. A new piece of technology, the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope, is exciting scientists enough that they are even starting to predict what kind of discoveries it might make. One such type of discovery, described in a pre-print paper on arXiv by Vito Saggese of the Italian National Institute for Astrophysics and his co-authors on the Roman Galactic Exoplanet Survey Project Infrastructure Team, is the discovery of many more multiplantery exoplanet systems an astronomical phenomena Roman is well placed to detect - microlensing.
Satellites Used to Have Months to Avoid Collisions—Now They Have Days
In the era of mega constellations, spacecraft typically have less than a week to avoid crashes
Two Möbius Strips Combine to Create a Bizarre Object That Only Exists in 4D
In geometry, there are surfaces that do without an inside or outside—and some need at least four dimensions to exist
Igloos on Mars? How Future Astronauts Could Use Ice to Survive
Humans traveling to Mars will need protective habitats to live on the harsh surface. Ice could help
10 Mind-Blowing Brain Discoveries from 2025
From glowing neurons to newborn memories, here are the most fascinating brain discoveries of 2025
Excerpt—The Great Shadow, by Susan Wise Bauer
In an exclusive excerpt of her new book The Great Shadow, historian Susan Wise Bauer explores how sickness is distinct from injury and has shaped the way we think about ourselves and our world
