Scientists say we’ve been wrong about what makes sprinters fast

A new international study is calling into question long-standing assumptions about what makes elite sprinters so fast. The findings offer a fresh perspective that could reshape how Australia identifies and trains its next generation of speed athletes. Published in Sports Medicine, the research looks at sprinting through a dynamical systems…

Something just hit the Moon and left a bright new scar

I’ll admit something surprising. Even after years of stargazing, tracking planets, and scanning deep sky objects through a telescope, I only clearly noticed the Man in the Moon about five years ago. While studying the familiar dark plains and bright highlands, I somehow overlooked a pattern people have recognized for…

This walking robot could change how we search for life on Mars

Planetary missions on the surface of Mars are carried out with extreme caution. Communication delays between Earth and robotic explorers can range from four to 22 minutes, and limited data transmission capacity adds another layer of constraint. Because of this, scientists must carefully plan each step in advance. Rovers are…

Quantum computers keep losing data. This breakthrough finally tracks it

Quantum computers hold enormous promise, but they are still far from dependable. Their biggest weakness is instability, which causes the information they process to quickly break down. Researchers around the world are working to solve this problem, including a team in Norway. “In quantum computers, information is transmitted and stored…

Scientists just uncovered the secret behind nature’s “proton highway”

Every second, countless electrical charges move through the human body. These microscopic signals are essential for life. They drive communication between cells, enable energy production, and support metabolism. None of this would work without the careful and controlled movement of charges across cell membranes and within cells. In many ways,…

The world’s “oldest octopus” was never an octopus

A well-known 300-million-year-old fossil once believed to be the oldest octopus ever discovered has been reclassified after new analysis revealed it is something entirely different. The specimen had even earned a place in the Guinness Book of Records, but scientists now say that distinction was based on a misinterpretation. The…

Scientists discover reversible male birth control that stops sperm production

Cornell University scientists have taken a major step toward developing a safe, reversible, long-acting and 100% effective nonhormonal male contraceptive, considered the holy grail of male contraception. In a proof-of-principle study conducted in mice over six years, the team showed that interrupting a key step in meiosis, the process that…

Your vitamin D levels in midlife could shape your brain decades later

People with higher levels of vitamin D in midlife may have lower levels of tau protein in the brain years later, according to a study published April 1, 2026, in Neurology Open Access, an official journal of the American Academy of Neurology. Tau is a protein closely linked to dementia.…

Scientists just watched Alzheimer’s damage happen in real time

An Oregon State University scientist working with a group of undergraduate students has revealed new, real-time details about a chemical process tied to Alzheimer’s disease. The discovery could help researchers design more effective drugs in the future. Using a specialized measurement technique, the team tracked how certain metals can trigger…

This “master gene” may be driving pancreatic cancer’s spread

Scientists at Johns Hopkins Medicine have identified a gene that appears to play a major role in how pancreatic cancer spreads. In laboratory-grown cells, the gene KLF5 (Krueppel-like factor 5) was found to fuel tumor growth and invasion not by changing the DNA sequence itself, but by reshaping how DNA…

Scientists say 7 days of meditation can rewire your brain

Researchers at the University of California San Diego report that a weeklong program combining meditation and other mind-body techniques can quickly produce measurable changes in both brain activity and blood biology. The study found that these practices activated natural pathways involved in brain flexibility, metabolism, immune function, and pain relief.…

This diet could slash cholera infections by up to 100x

Cholera, a dangerous bacterial infection that causes severe diarrhea and can be fatal without treatment, may be significantly reduced through diet. New research from the University of California, Riverside suggests that eating more protein could help limit the infection’s ability to take hold in the body. The study found that…

This new chip survives 1300°F (700°C) and could change AI forever

Modern electronics power everything from smartphones to satellites, but they all share a major limitation. Heat. Once temperatures climb above roughly 200 degrees Celsius, most devices begin to break down. For decades, this thermal barrier has been one of the toughest challenges in engineering. Researchers at the University of Southern…

Earth’s most powerful ocean current didn’t form the way we thought

The Antarctic Circumpolar Current carries more than 100 times the total flow of all the world’s rivers combined. It circles Antarctica without being blocked by land, making it one of the most important drivers of the global climate system. New research published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy…

Scientists found a “lost world” of animals that shouldn’t exist yet

A newly identified fossil site in southwest China is changing scientists’ understanding of how complex animal life first developed on Earth. The discovery shows that many major animal groups were already present before the Cambrian Period began. The research was led by teams from Oxford University’s Museum of Natural History…

Scientists discover the “Goldilocks” secret behind life on Earth

Life cannot begin on a planet unless certain chemical elements are available in large enough amounts. Two of the most important are phosphorus and nitrogen. Phosphorus helps build DNA and RNA, which store and pass along genetic information, and it also plays a key role in how cells manage energy.…

This “forbidden” exoplanet has an atmosphere scientists can’t explain

New observations from the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) are shedding light on a highly unusual exoplanet known as TOI-5205 b, sometimes described as “forbidden.” Scientists found that this giant planet’s atmosphere contains fewer heavy elements than its host star, a surprising result that could reshape how researchers understand the…

The brain might not create consciousness after all

Is consciousness simply created by the brain, or could it be a deeper feature of reality itself? That question is at the center of a presentation by Christof Koch, a leading figure in modern neuroscience, at the 15th “Behind and Beyond the Brain” Symposium organized by the Bial Foundation, taking…

Scientists discover hidden brain switch that tells you to stop eating

For years, scientists believed the answer centered almost entirely on neurons, the brain’s primary signaling cells. But new research is challenging that idea, pointing to a more complex system involving other types of brain cells. A study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences on April 6,…

These bizarre new tarantulas turn mating into a fight for survival

Researchers have identified four previously unknown tarantula species in the Arabian Peninsula and the Horn of Africa, and they turned out to be far more unusual than expected. “Based on both morphological and molecular data, they are so distinct from their closest relatives that we had to establish an entirely…

Scientists may have found a way to keep your bones strong for life

There is growing demand for treatments that can safely prevent and reverse bone loss over time. Osteoporosis, a condition that weakens bones and makes them more likely to break, affects about six million people in Germany alone, most of them women. It is especially common with aging and after menopause,…

Scientists may finally detect hidden ripples in spacetime

Researchers led by the University of Warwick have introduced the first unified approach for identifying “spacetime fluctuations” — tiny, random distortions in the structure of spacetime that appear in many efforts to link quantum physics with gravity. These minute variations were first proposed by physicist John Wheeler and are expected…

Scientists find quantum computers forget most of their work

Imagine setting up an elaborate chain of dominoes, where each piece must strike the next in perfect sequence to create a satisfying final outcome. Quantum circuits operate in a similar way. They consist of many small steps, called (“operations”), that work together to process information in a highly coordinated manner.…

A drug already in trials may finally stop hepatitis E

A drug currently being tested to treat hepatitis C may also work against hepatitis E by stopping the virus from reproducing. Hepatitis E infects millions of people worldwide and leads to about 70,000 deaths each year. Despite its impact, there is still no approved vaccine or targeted treatment. That situation…

This simple design could save oyster reefs worldwide

New research has revealed how to design artificial habitats that give oyster reefs the best chance to recover. The findings come from a detailed analysis of the natural shapes and structures of oyster reefs. Published in the journal Nature, the study shows that oyster reefs are not random clusters of…

AI breakthrough cuts energy use by 100x while boosting accuracy

Artificial intelligence is consuming enormous amounts of electricity in the United States. According to the International Energy Agency, AI systems and data centers used about 415 terawatt hours of power in 2024. That accounts for more than 10% of the country’s total electricity production, and demand is projected to double…

Study of 1,700 languages reveals surprising hidden patterns

Despite the enormous variety of languages spoken around the world, certain grammatical patterns keep showing up. A new study finds that about one-third of long-standing “linguistic universals” are backed by strong statistical evidence when tested using modern evolutionary methods. An international research team led by Annemarie Verkerk (Saarland University) and…