Scientific American.com
Radar picks up on bird migration. But how do we tell birds and storms apart?
Flock shape, speed and structure are key in deciphering whether radar readouts are birds, bats, insects or weather
Are attention spans really shrinking? What the science says
Digital distractions can undermine our focus, but research suggests that our inherent capacity to pay attention hasn’t diminished
Baby ‘cosmic fossil’ galaxy brings JWST closer to glimpsing the universe’s first stars
Seen just 800 million years after the big bang, an object called LAP1-B is a galactic building block that seems to hold some of the first stars to ever shine
Tiny robot drones learn to navigate the world like honeybees
Mapping their starting point like bees do helps autonomous drones find their way
WHO warns the world is falling short of and even reversing its health targets
Malaria incidence is increasing, progress on maternal mortality is stalling, and some childhood vaccine rates are plateauing or have dipped below the threshold for herd immunity
Why hantavirus takes so long to show symptoms and what that means for containment
People exposed to the Andes strain of the hantavirus may not develop symptoms for up to 42 days, a delay that makes tracing infections more difficult
Quitting weight-loss drugs or a diet can cause weight regain—two strategies could help prevent that
With millions of people now using GLP-1 drugs such as Wegovy and Zepbound, scientists are racing to find ways to help people retain their weight loss after they stop taking the medication
Each atom in the universe might be unique
Long-held assumptions tell us that atoms with the same number of protons, neutrons and electrons are indistinguishable, but one physicist wants to put this idea to the test
Do you need more protein? What science says about high-protein diets
Are we really falling short on protein—or is the high-protein craze overblown?
Hantavirus treatments are coming, but funding is holding them back
There is no cure for the hantavirus that has so far sickened at least nine people and killed three of them on a cruise ship outbreak, but several therapies have shown promise in animal studies
Ivermectin prescriptions spiked after Mel Gibson touted it for cancer on Joe Rogan’s podcast
There is no hard evidence that ivermectin can treat cancer, but that hasn’t stopped people from trying it
Math reveals the one game of chance you should always accept
Probability theory and the Saint Petersburg paradox can help you determine whether the stakes of a game are too great
Trump’s FDA Commissioner Marty Makary resigns
Makary, a face of Trump’s Make America Healthy Again agenda, oversaw the embattled agency as it dealt with vaping, abortion and other issues
See SpaceX Starship V3 megarocket on the launchpad as it gears up for its next test flight
This test flight comes at a pivotal moment for Elon Musk’s SpaceX as the company pushes to go public this year and show it’s ready for NASA’s planned 2027 Artemis III mission
China’s Yangtze River has been ‘pirating’ water from the Yellow River for more than a million years, scientists reveal
For the last 1.7 million years, China’s Yangtze River has been stealing water from the Yellow River, new research shows
PCOS just got a new name—here’s what to know
A multiyear effort to rename polycystic ovary syndrome finally revealed the condition’s new name: polyendocrine metabolic ovarian syndrome
NASA’s Apollo moon missions relied on this computer scientist and differential equations
Margaret Hamilton designed safety features for NASA inspired in part by her four-year-old
Gemstones on Mars—why the Red Planet could be harboring rubies, opals, and more
NASA’s Mars rovers have found traces of minerals akin to those that make up precious gems on Earth. But their appearance and abundance on Mars is likely very different, experts say
Is the U.S. in a new era of political violence? Experts say it’s complicated
Researchers who study political violence say that the U.S. is in a period of more intense political rhetoric, but there have been far darker periods in the nation’s history
Sucker fish are hiding in manta rays’ ‘butthole,’ new study reveals
The practice of “cloacal diving” could help remoras hide from predators—it could also be a feeding strategy or help the fish hitchhike
