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11 votes
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Tiny robots made from human cells heal damaged tissue (in the lab)
15 votes -
If you try to pass a bouncy ball under a table, if it hits the underside of the table it will just bounce back out the way it came
8 votes -
The achievement of gender parity in a large astrophysics research centre
7 votes -
The cocktail party effect — our stunning ability to filter out words and sounds
18 votes -
Vavilovian mimicry
10 votes -
What am I thankful for this year? Amazing scientific discoveries.
19 votes -
Machine learning creates a massive map of smelly molecules
14 votes -
Vanishing act for water waves - Perfect absorption cavity could protect coastlines
16 votes -
Elusive egg-laying mammal named after Sir David Attenborough caught on camera for the first time
23 votes -
Mexican Congress holds second UFO session featuring Peruvian mummies
23 votes -
The Brain Scoop relaunch!
14 votes -
Something weird happens when you keep squeezing
19 votes -
Videoconference fatigue from a neurophysiological perspective (first neurophysiological evidence)
23 votes -
Deep in the Arctic permafrost, the Svalbard Global Seed Vault is protecting Africa's food supply
12 votes -
The story of when washing hands was considered crazy
12 votes -
Unzicker's "Real Physics": on dangers of Youtube physicists
12 votes -
In defense of the rat
14 votes -
Denmark is building on the success of blockbuster drugs – the country's focus on reinvestment is feeding a stream of discovery
7 votes -
Rats have an imagination, new research finds
57 votes -
The genetic heritage of the Denisovans may have left its mark on our mental health
16 votes -
Long presumed to have no heads at all, sea stars may be nothing but
25 votes -
A brief history of tricky mathematical tiling
10 votes -
What causes fainting? Scientists finally have an answer.
22 votes -
Scientists in Sweden have succeeded in extracting and sequencing RNA molecules from an extinct species, a century old Tasmanian tiger known as a thylacine
16 votes -
Six creatures that are actually real-life zombies
18 votes -
'Not of faculty quality': How Penn mistreated Katalin Karikó, the Nobel Prize winner of 2023
25 votes -
How laboratory glassware is blown in the UK
12 votes -
Future technology: Twenty-two ideas about to change our world
6 votes -
Researchers develop new mechanism to create water-repellent surfaces
7 votes -
Why the empty atom picture misunderstands quantum theory
22 votes -
Human microbiome myths and misconceptions
10 votes -
Can YOU win rock, paper, scissors against Grey? 99.9999999% will fail.
40 votes -
Womb transplants are now a life-changing reality. Here’s how the extraordinary procedure works.
37 votes -
Mutations matter
5 votes -
The mathematician who sculpted the shape of space - obituary for Eugenio Calabi
13 votes -
The world inside you
11 votes -
UK's nuclear fusion site (JET) ends experiments after forty years
18 votes -
Polyhedra world
8 votes -
What's your favorite dinosaur?
I'm by no means a dinosaur expert, but I'd consider myself an enthusiast. My favorite is the Carnotaurus. It's not quite as big as the classic T-Rex and has even tinier arms, but dude had bull...
I'm by no means a dinosaur expert, but I'd consider myself an enthusiast.
My favorite is the Carnotaurus. It's not quite as big as the classic T-Rex and has even tinier arms, but dude had bull horns on its noggin! And it'll still chase you down and gobble you up.
Everybody's got a favorite. And if you don't, find your poor lost inner child and ask them;
What's your favorite Dinosaur?
56 votes -
Attosecond lasers explained (2023 Nobel Prize in physics)
6 votes -
2023 Nobel Prize – This year's Nobel Prize announcements will take place between 2nd - 9th October 2023
22 votes -
Physicists who explored tiny glimpses of time win Nobel Prize
23 votes -
Jewel of the forest: new electric blue tarantula species discovered in Thailand
12 votes -
Rare 1885 photo captures the first licensed women doctors of India, Japan, and Syria
9 votes -
Inside the world of 3D sound
3 votes -
ALPHA experiment at CERN observes the influence of gravity on antimatter
24 votes -
Magnifying curiosity with a pocket microscope
9 votes -
New vaccine technology could protect from future viruses and variants
The vaccine antigen technology, developed by the University of Cambridge and spin-out DIOSynVax in early 2020, provided protection against all known variants of SARS-CoV-2 – the virus that causes...
The vaccine antigen technology, developed by the University of Cambridge and spin-out DIOSynVax in early 2020, provided protection against all known variants of SARS-CoV-2 – the virus that causes COVID-19 – as well as other major coronaviruses, including those that caused the first SARS epidemic in 2002.
The studies in mice, rabbits and guinea pigs [...] found that the vaccine candidate provided a strong immune response against a range of coronaviruses by targeting the parts of the virus that are required for replication.
Professor Jonathan Heeney from Cambridge’s Department of Veterinary Medicine, who led the research, [said] “We wanted to come up with a vaccine that wouldn’t only protect against SARS-CoV-2, but all its relatives.”
18 votes -
Anti-COVID drug may have led to virus mutations: study
10 votes