New Scientist Space - Cosmology
Rediscover The OA, a TV show with echoes of late director David Lynch
The death of David Lynch, who shaped decades of film and TV, is bound to hurt. Rediscovering a show called The OA helps, with its Twin Peaks-style echoes of small-town US and other Lynchian themes, says Bethan Ackerley
Categories: Astronomy
Eerie image of a space-bound rocket among photo contest finalists
This photograph of a Soyuz rocket bathed in mist was selected as a finalist for the Sony World Photography Awards 2025 competition
Categories: Astronomy
How Moore's law led us to a flawed vision of the future
Back in the 1960s, it seemed like better communications could solve all our problems. Don’t blame the technology for the failure of that dream, says Annalee Newitz
Categories: Astronomy
Scientists want to poke me where, with a what?
Feedback discovers that breasts have been "largely ignored" when it comes to tactile acuity – but is relieved that researchers have acted to change this oversight
Categories: Astronomy
How neuroscience and bad studies have fuelled intensive parenting
Motherdom is the latest book to lay bare the shaky science pressuring parents to perfectly steer their children's development from birth. It's a welcome reality check, finds Penny Sarchet
Categories: Astronomy
Health scares for a new generation must be tackled with solid science
A rise in cancers among younger people, particularly colorectal cancer, is prompting speculation on social media over the causes. Only slow, careful research can get to the truth
Categories: Astronomy
Light has been transformed into a 'supersolid' for the first time
Supersolids are strange materials that behave like both a solid and a fluid due to quantum effects – and now researchers have created an intriguing new type of supersolid from laser light
Categories: Astronomy
Ancient humans used bone tools a million years earlier than we thought
Hominins may have learned how to make bone tools by adapting the techniques they mastered for stone ones
Categories: Astronomy
The critical computer systems still relying on decades-old code
Software used by banks and the space industry may still rely on archaic code. We went in search of the oldest code in use and asked, what happens when it glitches?
Categories: Astronomy
The solar system was once engulfed by a vast wave of gas and dust
The stars as seen from Earth would have looked dimmer 14 million years ago, as the solar system was in the middle of passing through clouds of dust and gas
Categories: Astronomy
Andrew Barto and Richard Sutton win Turing award for AI training trick
The Turing award, often considered the Nobel prize of computing, has gone to two computer scientists for their work on reinforcement learning, a key technique in training artificial intelligence models
Categories: Astronomy