
New drug could prevent diabetes complications not fixed with blood sugar control, study hints
An experimental drug compound could be a promising treatment for harmful diabetes complications, per a new study in lab mice and human cells.

By Tom Metcalfe, Eos.org published
This could be bad news for satellites and spacefarers.

By Skyler Ware published
Groundwater extraction has caused parts of the Willcox Basin to subside by up to 12 feet since the 1950s. New research reveals that some areas sunk by 3 feet in just 4 years.

By Ben Turner published
New images show that comet C/2025 K1 (ATLAS) has fragmented after passing its closest point to the sun, ahead of its close approach to Earth later this month. This is not the interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS.

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 Nicoletta Lanese published
A man in New Jersey has died from a meat allergy that people can develop after being bitten by certain tick species.

By Jeanne Timmons published
Scientists successfully sequence the RNA from woolly mammoths found in Siberia that lived up between 10,000 thousand and 50,000 years ago.

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 How bad-faith arguments sow doubt by weaponizing scientific humility.

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 Larissa G. Capella published
A novel experiment has revealed a phenomenon called the Bohr–Weisskopf effect in a pear-shaped nucleus in a molecule for the first time.

By Tia Ghose published
Mathematician Grigori Perelman solved the Poincaré conjecture, and then rejected the $1 million prize that came with it.
By Tia Ghose published
Over a feverish 10-day period, scientists synthesized and described a new class of carbon molecules, called buckminster fullerenes, after the iconic 20th-century inventor.

By Victoria Atkinson published
Bubbles are usually the first sign that water’s coming to the boil, but heating it in a microwave seems to skip this important step. Here’s what’s going on.

By Tia Ghose published
Carolyn Bertozzi and colleagues laid out a way to make paradigm-shifting "click-chemistry" compatible with living cells, opening up a window into living organisms.

By Joanna Thompson published
When quantum computers become commonplace, current cryptographic systems will become obsolete. Scientists are racing to get ahead of the problem and keep our data secure.

By Keumars Afifi-Sabet published
IBM has released two new complex quantum processors alongside a new framework that would allow us to track the first demonstration of quantum advantage.
Please login or signup to comment
Please wait...