New Scientist Space - Cosmology
Rereading the best sci-fi writers of all time: Larry Niven
Larry Niven's Ringworld won him the Hugo and Nebula awards when it was published 55 years ago. As the New Scientist Book Club embarks on a reread, Emily H. Wilson looks at how it holds up
Categories: Astronomy
Artist brings data to life in striking screen prints
With a background in maths and design, Rebecca Kaye uses data to make sense of the natural world
Categories: Astronomy
A political take on cancer provides a tough but much-needed analysis
Nafis Hasan's Metastasis is a deep dive into the economics and politics of cancer treatment. This makes for a dense and difficult read, but one that is well worth the effort
Categories: Astronomy
Could brain-computer interface let us inhabit robot avatars on Mars?
In the latest instalment of our Future Chronicles column, which explores an imagined history of inventions yet to come, Rowan Hooper reveals how brain-computer interface let us travel to Mars via robot avatars in the late 2020s
Categories: Astronomy
The blue whale: the world's most versatile measuring stick?
Feedback is delighted to hear from a reader who proposes an ingenious new unit of data – but we have some quibbles with the maths
Categories: Astronomy
Doctors need to listen to the evidence about bed rest in pregnancy
Bed rest is commonly prescribed for high-risk pregnancies. It can't hurt and might help, right? Wrong, says Jacqueline Sears
Categories: Astronomy
Gripping story reveals race to crack world's oldest script, cuneiform
Cuneiform, the oldest identified writing system, defied deciphering – until 1857. What happened then makes a terrific read, in Joshua Hammer's The Mesopotamian Riddle
Categories: Astronomy
What politicians so often get wrong about science
Governments love asking what scientific research will bring society, but the most important discoveries come from wondering without direction
Categories: Astronomy
What the surprising lives of solitary animals reveal about us
A new understanding of why some animals evolved to be loners, and the benefits that brings, shows that a social lifestyle isn’t necessarily superior
Categories: Astronomy
What the surprising lives of solitary animals reveals about us
A new understanding of why some animals evolved to be loners, and the benefits that brings, shows that a social lifestyle isn’t necessarily superior
Categories: Astronomy
Can Amazon's soon-to-launch Kuiper satellites rival Musk's Starlink?
Amazon is aiming to launch its first operational satellites today to provide speedy internet connections in remote regions, but it will still take some time to catch up with its main competitor, SpaceX's Starlink
Categories: Astronomy
Largest mammalian brain map ever could unpick what makes us human
A map of part of a mouse brain, which is expected to be generalisable to people, could help scientists understand behaviours, consciousness and even what it means to be human
Categories: Astronomy
Arabia has been green for long spells in the past 8 million years
Ancient rocks reveal there were several humid spells in Arabia’s past, which might have given early hominins a route out of Africa long before our genus migrated
Categories: Astronomy
Light-based computers are getting close to a commercial launch
Computers that use photons rather than electrons to manipulate data promise greater speed and energy efficiency, and the technology is developing rapidly
Categories: Astronomy
Space could emerge from time
An investigation of the changing behaviour of a single quantum bit through time has uncovered a tantalising similarity to the geometry of three-dimensional space
Categories: Astronomy
The hunt for the birthplace of Indo-European languages
It’s incredibly tricky to pin down the origin of the language that led to the words spoken everywhere between Spain and India – and it’ll be even harder to be sure we’ve got it right
Categories: Astronomy
Ancient rocks boost case for mini ice age linked to fall of Rome
Unusual rocks on an Icelandic beach were dropped there by icebergs, adding to evidence that an unusually cool period preceded the collapse of the Roman Empire
Categories: Astronomy
How to make great coffee with fewer beans, according to science
Physicists have determined that the ideal technique for pour-over coffee can use up to 10 per cent fewer beans to make a cup just as flavoursome
Categories: Astronomy
Rethink of fossils hints dinosaurs still thrived before asteroid hit
The number of dinosaurs may have been stable before the asteroid impact, despite evidence that species were getting less diverse
Categories: Astronomy
What the new science of magic reveals about perception and free will
Magicians have long exploited quirks in our perception of the world to make us experience the impossible. Now, cognitive psychology is exploring how they do it and revealing fresh insights into how our minds work
Categories: Astronomy