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2026 will shed light on whether a little-known drug helps with autism
2026 will shed light on whether a little-known drug helps with autism
Not Every Galaxy Has a Central Black Hole
Many less massive galaxies appear to lack something astronomers thought was ubiquitous: a central, supermassive black hole.
The post Not Every Galaxy Has a Central Black Hole appeared first on Sky & Telescope.
A strange kind of quantumness may be key to quantum computers' success
A strange kind of quantumness may be key to quantum computers' success
The Ambitious Plan to Spot Habitable Moons Around Giant Planets
arXiv:2512.15858v1 Announce Type: new Abstract: Despite numerous search campaigns based on a diverse set of observational techniques, exomoons - prospective satellites of extrasolar planets - remain an elusive and hard-to-pin-down class of objects. Yet, the case for intensifying this search is compelling: as in the Solar System, moons can act as proxies for studying planet formation and evolution, provide direct clues as to the migration history of the planetary hosts and, in favourable cases...
Why Does Life Keep Evolving These Geometric Patterns?
A global catalog shows how creatures across the tree of life balance rigidity with flexibility in remarkably consistent ways
How to Keep Your New Year’s Resolutions—Behavioral Science Tips That Work
Behavioral economist Katy Milkman explains why most New Year’s resolutions fail and shares how science-backed strategies can build habits that last.
The best new science fiction books of January 2026
The best new science fiction books of January 2026
From roots to rocket
On 5 January 2026, the European Astronaut Centre (EAC) in Cologne, Germany, hosted a special tradition: the planting of an astronaut tree by ESA astronaut Sophie Adenot in honour of her first mission to space, εpsilon. This symbolic gesture celebrates her achievements and future mission while reinforcing the deep connection between space explorers and the planet they call home.
Ghostly particles might just break our understanding of the universe
Ghostly particles might just break our understanding of the universe
An Amphitheater of Rock at Cedar Breaks
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XRISM Provides the Sharpest Image to Date of a Rapidly Spinning Black Hole
The first results on the iconic active galactic nucleus MCG–6-30-15 captured with the XRISM mission show the most precise signatures yet of its supermassive black hole’s extreme gravity and the outflows that shape its galaxy.
New Research Reveals how Gravitational Waves Could be Used to Decode Dark Matter
A new study by researchers at the University of Amsterdam shows how gravitational waves from black holes can be used to reveal the presence of dark matter and help determine its properties. The key is a new model, based on Einstein’s theory of general relativity, that tracks in detail how a black hole interacts with the surrounding matter.
Earth-like Planets Need a Cosmic-Ray Bath
Terrestrial planets such as Earth need an early solar system rich in short-lived radioisotopes. But the supernovae that create these elements would tend to rip an early system apart. A new study suggests that these isotopes are produced by a bath of cosmic rays from more distant supernovae.