
How do our brains wake up?
How do we go from sound asleep to awake in the blink of an eye?
By Patrick Pester published
Greenhouse gas concentrations increased by a record amount in 2024 as more carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide became locked in Earth's atmosphere, a World Meteorological Organization report finds.
By Patrick Pester published
Researchers have discovered dozens of new methane seeps littering the ocean floor in the Ross Sea coastal region of Antarctica, raising concerns of an unknown positive climate feedback loop that could accelerate global warming.
By Jamie Carter published
Comets Lemmon and SWAN will be at their brightest just as the annual Orionid meteor shower produced by Halley's Comet reaches its peak.
By Harry Baker published
Researchers have found a suspected clump of dark matter lurking within the luminous halo of a well-known "Einstein ring." The mysterious object, the smallest of its kind ever seen, could help shed light on the universe's missing matter.
Discover the research changing our understanding of the world
Extraordinary images of our sublime universe
Science questions, answered
Test your knowledge on all things science with our weekly, free crossword puzzle!
Test your knowledge of everything from space to nature
A look at the weird and wonderful species that live on our planet
Unusual case reports from the medical literature
A window onto extraordinary landscapes on Earth
Medical conditions you may never have heard of before
A glimpse into how people lived in the past
Incredible images of our planet from above
Our roundup the biggest discoveries and top science in the news each week
By Emily Cooke published
Blood tests that detect early cancer are coming to market. Could they lead to earlier diagnosis and treatment?
By Marilyn Perkins published
There's some truth to the urban legend that certain toads have psychedelic properties, but licking them isn't a good idea.
By Sophie Berdugo published
Following Jane Goodall's death, chimp experts explain how her early observations still influence our understanding of our ape cousins.
By Harry Baker last updated
Science crossword Test your knowledge on all things science with our weekly, free crossword puzzle!
By Kit Yates published
Opinion Thousands of scientific papers are retracted every year because of fraudulent activity, with both authors and journals gaming a system to gain academic acclaim through deceit, dishonesty and false representation.
By Carlo Kopp, David Green, Fatima Seeme published
Opinion The pervasive spread of misinformation can be tracked to cognitive limitations, social influence and the global spread of online networks. Combatting it has become an "arms race" between truth and lies.
By Larissa G. Capella published
For the first time, physicists have simulated what objects moving near the speed of light would look like — an optical illusion called the Terrell-Penrose effect.
By Paul Sutter published
Planets that orbit white dwarf stars should be too hot to host alien life, theories suggest. But a new study accounting for Einstein's general relativity may rewrite that rule.
By Patrick Pester published
The 2025 Nobel Prize in Physics has been awarded to John Clarke, Michel H. Devoret and John M. Martinis "for the discovery of macroscopic quantum mechanical tunnelling and energy quantisation in an electric circuit."
By Donavyn Coffey last updated
Here's why you may start tearing up while slicing an onion.
By Owen Hughes published
Researchers used a new technique called algorithmic fault tolerance (AFT) to cut the time and computational cost of quantum error correction by up to 100 times in simulations of neutral-atom architecture.
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