New Scientist Space - Space Headlines
What is a mindset and can you cultivate a better one?
Concepts like the “growth mindset” are much misunderstood. But learn to cultivate certain beliefs about your future potential, and evidence suggests it really can foster success and bring health benefits
Categories: Astronomy
At last, we are discovering what quantum computers will be useful for
Quantum computers have been hyped as machines that can solve almost any problem. Yet it is becoming clearer that their near-term utility will be narrower
Categories: Astronomy
Why is it seemingly impossible to stop phone thieves?
The huge market for stolen smartphones means that thieves will continue to snatch them, but is there anything we can do to put a stop to this crime wave?
Categories: Astronomy
Stunning first images show the power of the Vera C. Rubin Observatory
A powerful new telescope in Chile is set to transform astronomy, and its first pictures of stellar nurseries and galaxies have just been unveiled
Categories: Astronomy
Nightmares linked to faster biological ageing and early death
Scary dreams disrupt our sleep and elevate our levels of the stress hormone cortisol, which may have serious consequences for our health over time
Categories: Astronomy
Sea spiders 'farm' methane-eating bacteria on their bodies
Sea spiders living near deep-sea methane seeps appear to cultivate and eat bacteria on their exoskeletons
Categories: Astronomy
Could Israel's bombing trigger a nuclear accident in Iran?
Attacks on Iran's nuclear facilities have already triggered at least one internal radiation leak, but should we be concerned that Israeli bombing could cause a larger nuclear accident?
Categories: Astronomy
Your passwords have probably been stolen and sold on the dark web
Technology reporter Matthew Sparkes thought his passwords and personal data were safe, but a tour of the murkier sides of the internet revealed otherwise
Categories: Astronomy
To understand sunburn, you need to know how UV provokes inflammation
We’ve known for nearly a century that UV radiation is linked to skin cancer, but modern advice about sunburn can be confusing. To understand what works, you need to know what UV really does to your skin
Categories: Astronomy
Dead NASA satellite unexpectedly emits powerful radio pulse
Astronomers are puzzled by a strong burst of radio waves traced back to a NASA satellite that had been inactive since the 1960s
Categories: Astronomy
Our big brains may have evolved because of placental sex hormones
Unlike other primates, humans are exposed to high levels of placental sex hormones in the womb, which may have shaped our evolutionary brain development
Categories: Astronomy
Your brain tracks your sleep debt – and now we may know how
A newly identified brain circuit in mice may explain why we sleep longer and deeper after being sleep deprived – and lead to new treatments for sleep conditions
Categories: Astronomy
CAR T-cell therapy could be made in the body of someone with cancer
Treating types of cancer with CAR T-cell therapy is expensive and inconvenient, but a streamlined approach that creates the therapy within the body could make the intervention cheaper and easier
Categories: Astronomy
Offsetting global fossil fuel stores by planting trees is impossible
Trees would have to be planted on a vast proportion of global land mass to offset the carbon dioxide emissions from burning the world’s fossil fuel reserves
Categories: Astronomy
Cold sore virus immediately reshapes our genome to boost its growth
The herpes virus that commonly causes cold sores affects how tightly coiled our DNA is and makes it shrink, all to help itself grow
Categories: Astronomy
Rapamycin seems to boost longevity as effectively as eating less
Restricting calories has been linked to living longer in many studies, and now it seems that the drug rapamycin has nearly the same effect, at least in animals
Categories: Astronomy
Could natural hydrogen from underground help the UK get to net zero?
Rocks in some parts of the UK have the potential to produce natural hydrogen, but it remains unclear whether the gas is present in economically viable quantities
Categories: Astronomy
Danny Boyle's long-awaited zombie sequel 28 Years Later is a triumph
The infected are back, over two decades since they first appeared in 2002's 28 Days Later — and this film is the best of the three, says film columnist Simon Ings
Categories: Astronomy
The best non-drug therapies to relieve the pain of knee osteoarthritis
Knee osteoarthritis is often treated via non-drug therapies, and now we have an idea of which ones work best
Categories: Astronomy
Fish rescue wins New Scientist Editors Award at Earth Photo 2025
This photo series capturing efforts to save the Chinook salmon of the Klamath river in the western US won the New Scientist Editors Award at the Earth Photo 2025 competition
Categories: Astronomy