Astronomy
Satellites could use magnetic fields to avoid collisions
Hubble Nets Menagerie of Young Stellar Objects
The 2030 Race for a Moon Reactor
The US’s federally funded space program has been struggling of late. With the recent cancellation of the Mars Sample Return mission, and mass layoffs / resignations taking place at NASA, the general sense of a lack of morale at the agency is palpable, even from a distance. Jared Isaacman, the billionaire software entrepreneur and rocket enthusiast who was recently confirmed as NASA administrator during his second confirmation hearing, hopes to change that, and one of his priorities is pushing the Artemis missions for a permanent human presence on the Moon. However, at least one big technical hurdle remains before being able to do so - how to power a base during the two week long lunar night. A recent press release describes how NASA, and another branch of the federal government (the Department of Energy - DoE) hope to solve that problem - with a lunar-ready nuclear fission reactor
The 3 best ways to tackle anxiety, according to a leading expert
The 3 best ways to tackle anxiety, according to a leading expert
Webb reveals Helix Nebula in glistening detail
The Alien Hunter's Shopping List
We recently discussed the different types of worlds that the Habitable Worlds Observatory (HWO) is expected to find that might have noticeable biosignatures. However, no matter how good the instrumentation on board the observatory is, the data it collects will be useless if scientists don’t know how to interpret it. A paper explaining what data they need to collect before analyzing HWO data was authored by Niki Parenteau, a research biologist at NASA, and her co-authors, which is now available in pre-print on arXiv.
Smoke plumes from Chile wildfires seen by Sentinel-3
As the U.S. marks a year of measles outbreaks, is the disease back for good?
The U.S. has held its measles-free status for more than 25 years. Experts say unrelenting outbreaks in the past year may change that
Mars once had a vast sea the size of the Arctic Ocean
Mars once had a vast sea the size of the Arctic Ocean
Is AI really conscious—or are we bringing it to life?
In rethinking whether AI is sentient, we are asking bigger questions about cognition, human-machine interaction and even our own consciousness
Can a ‘brain in a vat’ be conscious?
Consciousness researchers studying “islands of awareness” have found that disconnected brains likely sink into a strange form of deep sleep
How extremophile molds are destroying museum artifacts
Extremophile molds are invading art museums and devouring their collections. Stigma and climate change have fueled their spread
February 2026: Science history from 50, 100 and 150 years ago
Giant atoms; corpses for science
Which dog breed stereotypes are true? Here’s the science
A large dataset shows some dog stereotypes are based in reality, and others might be unfair characterizations
Readers respond to the October 2025 issue
Letters to the editors for the October 2025 issue of Scientific American
A bright light in the dark
The Nobel Prizes remind us how science can unite society and inspire hope for the future
What is consciousness? Science faces its hardest problem yet
Will brain science deliver answers about consciousness or hit another wall?
JWST could finally spot the very first stars in the universe
The James Webb Space Telescope should soon be able to spot the first generation of stars in space
