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Articles
- Scientists have succeeded in restoring learning ability and memory in elderly mice by activating just three genes, and this discovery raises a fundamental question: Does the brain age more than we think?
- One of Earth’s major carbon sinks may be beginning to release carbon that has been stored for thousands of years, and signs of this are already appearing in two dark lakes in the Congo
- A real interstellar comet entered the Solar System, and the buzz on social media was so intense that even artificial intelligence began generating data about aliens and impossible trajectories
- NASA has finally solved the mystery of the giant spiderwebs observed on Mars since 2006, and Curiosity’s findings have reignited the big question of how long water remained underground
- A nuclear-powered aircraft carrier named after George H. W. Bush returns from the Atlantic after completing key maneuvers, and the maneuver once again puts the spotlight on a decisive phase before deployment
- The tons of banana trunks left over after the harvest are being turned into raw materials for clothing and paper, while mechanical extraction and controlled drying are accelerating industrialization
- A researcher pits GPT-5.2, Claude Sonnet 4, and Gemini 3 Flash against each other in a fictional nuclear war, and what unfolds over 329 turns suggests that machines might be more ruthless than humans
- No more day laborers or manual harvesting: goodbye to traditional harvesting, hello to robots
- Goodbye to traditional cement: seaweed could forever change the most widely used material on the planet
- Say goodbye to blind watering: this new robot knows which trees need water and which don’t