Trending Science

New technology turns salty water into clean drinking water.
Power suppliers, technology providers, researchers and steel industry partners have launched a pilot plant to produce hydrogen using electricity from renewables.
Scientists were able to monitor seismic activity with a fibre optic cable connecting a North Sea wind farm to the shore.
There are major health benefits for people who watch Christmas-themed films all year.
An 81-year-old Harvard study offers sound advice on leading happy lives.
Leading academic journal ‘Nature’ publishes its annual list of 10 people who positively or negatively influenced science.
Drinking green tea may reduce risk of heart disease and stroke.
New study says an asteroid, not volcanic activity, killed off the dinosaurs.
Scientists recreate the voice of a 3 000-year-old mummy.
Solar telescope has produced the highest-resolution image of the Sun’s surface ever taken.
The most distant object ever visited by spacecraft reveals secrets of planetary formation.
For the first time, a research team from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) uses machine learning to tackle drug-resistant diseases.
Scientists discover the biggest explosion recorded in the universe since the Big Bang.
As masks become the norm in a post-COVID-19 world, experts discuss adapting to new social cues, facial recognition and even security concerns.
How do we prevent decoherence in quantum information technology and, in turn, create more advanced applications? This question is at the heart of the MQC project, which investigated ways to maintain coherence in quantum systems.
Scientists find that young girls and boys have the same math ability.
Scientists have discovered that silk can withstand space-cold temperatures. Their findings could help develop new materials for low-temperature and high-impact applications.
Bones of an ape that lived nearly 12 million years ago shed light on how humans first stood up.
Landmark study claims the first humans lived in a river valley in present-day Botswana.
In just over 3 minutes, quantum computer solves a complex problem that would take the most powerful supercomputer thousands of years.
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