New Scientist Space - Space Headlines
Human trials point the way towards an mRNA vaccine against HIV
We may be a step closer to a highly effective mRNA vaccine against HIV, but tests so far reveal that the approach can cause unpleasant skin reactions
Categories: Astronomy
Fascinating artistic depictions of sea life over millennia
Marine biologist Helen Scales's latest book, Ocean Art: From the shore to the deep, celebrates humans' enduring obsession with creatures that live beneath the waves
Categories: Astronomy
What would it take to rebuild economics around the natural world?
Saving the planet means factoring nature into our economics, argues Partha Dasgupta, in a book with fascinating ideas. But does it take passion to make people listen?
Categories: Astronomy
How invisibility cloaks could make us disappear – at least from AI
In this latest instalment of Future Chronicles, an imagined history of future inventions, Rowan Hooper reveals how invisibility cloaks could become mainstream
Categories: Astronomy
Jewellery that monitors movement? No, we can't anticipate any problems
Feedback foresees a dystopian future in which "smart jewellery" tracks the emotions and motions of its users
Categories: Astronomy
Why living in a volatile age may make our brains truly innovative
The unpredictability of our times isn't all bad, as it may help us think up some genuine new ideas, says Daniel Yon, author of A Trick of the Mind
Categories: Astronomy
Earth's extraordinary deep biosphere is our next great frontier
A fantastic alien adventure can be found on our very own planet by studying the microbial life in Earth's crust, according to Karen G. Lloyd's new book Intraterrestrials
Categories: Astronomy
Let a breakthrough in measuring body clocks ease the ills of shiftwork
New tests to gauge an individual's circadian rhythms could be put to good use helping night workers fend off the ill effects of their unsocial hours
Categories: Astronomy
Archaeologists are unearthing the most powerful women who ever lived
Astonishing new archaeological finds and ancient DNA analysis leave no doubt that throughout prehistory women were rulers, warriors, hunters and shamans
Categories: Astronomy
How life thrives in one of the most hostile environments on Earth
Creatures that lurk more than 9000 metres deep in the Pacific Ocean get their nutrients from a surprising source
Categories: Astronomy
Extra-hard hexagonal diamonds can now be grown in a lab
Hexagonal diamond up to 60 per cent stronger than normal diamonds could be used to create super-tough drilling and cutting tools for industrial applications
Categories: Astronomy
Covid-19 and flu may reawaken dormant cancer cells in the lungs
Mice with a handful of cancerous cells in their lungs experienced a 100-fold increase to this number after being infected with swine flu
Categories: Astronomy
New-to-science stick insect is the heaviest ever found in Australia
A giant stick insect species found in Australia’s Wet Tropics named Acrophylla alta can reach 40 centimetres in length and weigh 44 grams
Categories: Astronomy
Ancient pots found near Pompeii contain 2500-year-old honey
A mysterious residue inside a set of ancient Greek pots from Paestum, Italy, has now been identified as honey thanks to modern chemical analysis
Categories: Astronomy
Meltwater bursts through Greenland ice in first-of-a-kind eruption
Satellite images reveal how a subglacial lake erupted through the Greenland ice sheet – a phenomenon never witnessed before which could be driven by rising temperatures
Categories: Astronomy
Rust-based battery connects to an electricity grid for the first time
An iron-air battery in the Netherlands, which can store energy for 100 hours or more to make renewable power sources more consistent, has become the world’s first “rust” battery to connect with an electricity grid
Categories: Astronomy
California bets on iron-salt battery power to protect against wildfire
A battery made from cheap and non-flammable iron and salt could provide emergency power in one of California’s high wildfire risk zones
Categories: Astronomy
Forests with robust animal populations store four times as much carbon
An analysis of thousands of forest plots reveals an underappreciated link between animal biodiversity and carbon storage
Categories: Astronomy
Is gravity a new type of force that arises from cosmic entropy?
Decades ago, a renegade physicist suggested that gravity isn't so much a force as just a byproduct of the universe's tendency to get more disordered. Now this idea might finally be testable
Categories: Astronomy
Solar-powered ambush drones can wait for targets like land mines
Russian ambush drones have been seen in Ukraine fitted with cheap solar panels, which enable them to lurk indefinitely, waiting for a target to come near
Categories: Astronomy