Feed aggregator
Why Leftover Pizza Is Actually Healthier: The Science of ‘Resistant Starch’ Explained
Researchers have discovered that cooling starchy foods—from pizza to rice—creates “resistant starch,” a carb that behaves like fiber and alters your blood sugar response
SPHERE Shows Us How Our Solar System Isn't Much Different Than Others
Observations with the SPHERE instrument on the European Southern Observatory's VLT revealed the presence of debris rings similar to structures in our Solar System. SPHERE found rings similar to the Kuiper Belt and the Main Asteroid Belt. Though individual asteroids and comets can't be imaged, these debris rings infer that other solar systems have architectures similar to ours.
Is a River Alive? A Conversation with Robert Macfarlane on Nature’s Sovereignty
Scientific American sits down with nature writer Robert Macfarlane to discuss his latest book—one of our top picks of 2025—and whether a river has rights
Was the ‘Star of Bethlehem’ Really a Comet?
A scientist has identified a possible astronomical explanation for the Star of Bethlehem, as described in the Bible
Plastic Pollution Will More than Double by 2040, Yielding a Garbage Truck's Worth of Waste Each Second
An estimated 280 million metric tons of plastic waste will enter the air, water, soil, and human bodies every year by 2040, data shows
Comet 3I/ATLAS from beyond solar system carries key molecule for life
Comet 3I/ATLAS from beyond solar system carries key molecule for life
Testing Drones for Mars in the Mojave Desert
Testing Drones for Mars in the Mojave Desert
Researchers from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory monitor a research drone in this September 2025 photo. This flight occurred in Dumont Dunes, an area of the Mojave Desert, as part of a larger test campaign to develop navigation software that would guide future rotorcraft on Mars. The work was among 25 projects funded by NASA’s Mars Exploration Program this past year to push the limits of future technologies.
Whether it’s new navigation software, slope-scaling robotic scouts, or long-distance gliders, the technology being developed by the Mars Exploration Program envisions a future where robots can explore all on their own — or even help astronauts do their work.
Read more about the drone flight software test.
Text credit: NASA/Andrew Good
Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
Testing Drones for Mars in the Mojave Desert
Researchers from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory monitor a research drone in this September 2025 photo. This flight occurred in Dumont Dunes, an area of the Mojave Desert, as part of a larger test campaign to develop navigation software that would guide future rotorcraft on Mars. The work was among 25 projects funded by NASA’s Mars Exploration Program this past year to push the limits of future technologies.
Whether it’s new navigation software, slope-scaling robotic scouts, or long-distance gliders, the technology being developed by the Mars Exploration Program envisions a future where robots can explore all on their own — or even help astronauts do their work.
Read more about the drone flight software test.
Text credit: NASA/Andrew Good
Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
What If the Moon Were Cheese? John Scalzi’s Latest Book Has the Answer
Scientific American talks to the author of When the Moon Hits Your Eye, one of our best fiction picks for 2025
Tattooing may trigger localised damage to the immune system
Tattooing may trigger localised damage to the immune system
CDC Vaccine Panel Scraps Guidance for Universal Hepatitis B Shots at Birth
New guidance from the CDC’s vaccine advisory panel would do away with a decades-old universal birth dose recommendation for hepatitis B that helped cut infections by 99 percent in the U.S.
Daniel H. Wilson on Finding a Native Take on Traditional Alien Invasion Stories
Hole in the Sky, by Daniel H. Wilson, is one of Scientific American’s best fiction picks of 2025. In the novel, aliens talk through an AI headset and land in the Cherokee Nation, while the military scrambles to contain and control the unknown
Extremophile ‘Fire Amoeba’ Pushes the Boundaries of Complex Life
It was thought that complex cells couldn’t survive above a certain temperature, but a tiny amoeba has proven that assumption wrong