
Loneliness may contribute to memory issues, but not dementia — they are 'not the same thing'
A researcher explains what we know — and what we don't — about the link between loneliness and memory problems.
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By Harry Baker published
Photographers caught a spectacular emerald-green fireball meteor streaking above Lindisfarne in northeast England, where Viking raiders famously killed and robbed Christian monks in the eighth century.

By Pandora Dewan published
A large hole opened up in the sun's atmosphere this week, spewing high-speed solar winds that will paint northern lights displays across several U.S. states this weekend.

By Harry Baker published
Astronomers have accurately measured the "dancing" energy jets of the first confirmed black hole, Cygnus X-1, more than 60 years after it was first spotted.

By Ivan Farkas published
A comprehensive new study combines decades of research to reveal that we're missing an essential component in our understanding of how the universe works.

By Patrick Pester published
NASA has released a 'Moon Base User's Guide' that reveals the major gaps the agency and its partners must fill in to land and live on the moon.

By Sascha Pare published
A new study suggests rare earth elements form in magma above ancient subduction zones, as that magma reacts with substances that are released when one tectonic plate dives beneath another.

By Harry Baker published
Earth from space A 2010 satellite photo shows the point where a small lake bisects the snowy rim of an ancient glacier on Canada's Baffin Island. The rippling, snow-rimmed structure is the last remaining fragment of a colossal ice sheet that once covered large parts of North America.

By Hannah Osborne published
Interview Perry Samson was helping students conduct field experiments on supercell storms in Kansas in 2008 when one suddenly turned into a tornado and dragged him in.

By Sascha Pare published
Once a thriving sardine fishing island, today Aoshima is home to roughly 80 cats and just a handful of people who look after the felines with the help of food donations from around Japan.

By Tik Root, Grist published
Amid drought and heat waves, April's national wildfire forecast shows that nearly the entire Western U.S. will face an above-normal risk of wildfires at some point in the next four months.

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By Kristina Killgrove published
A DNA analysis of pathogens from a pre-Hispanic mummy revealed that the bacterium that causes scarlet fever and strep throat was present in the Americas prior to European colonization.

By Owen Jarus published
The stories about King Arthur are almost certainly false or greatly exaggerated, but did the man himself exist?

By Kristina Killgrove published
The temple included a network of water infrastructure, revealing the importance of the ancient city and the Nile.

By Jennifer Nalewicki, Laura Geggel last updated
Shoes can give us an interesting insight into what people used to wear. Here are a dozen of the most extraordinary finds from the archaeological record.

By Kristina Killgrove published
Over the past 10,000 years, evolution in West Eurasia has been selecting for light skin, red hair and resistance to HIV and leprosy in humans, according to a new study.

By Ashley P. Taylor published
There's lore about chickens surviving from seconds to months after their heads are chopped off, but what does the science say?

By Kenna Hughes-Castleberry published
A new study adds to the growing body of evidence that lobsters feel pain, with the crustaceans seemingly responding to electrical shocks with emotional distress.

By Kenna Hughes-Castleberry published
Using synchrotron X-ray CT scans of a fossilized, intact embryo, researchers found evidence that the plant-eating mammal Lystrosaurus laid eggs, which answers a key question about mammalian evolution.

By Skyler Ware published
During the Triassic, a newly described species related to modern crocodiles and alligators stalked prey on land, not the water, a new study finds.

By Kenna Hughes-Castleberry published
Three orcas from Alaska surfaced in the waters between Washington state and Canada in March, an area where they've never been documented.

By Chris Simms published
The first well-observed "civil war" in wild chimpanzees reveals that shifting social ties alone can fracture a group, igniting deadly conflict between former friends.

By Tia Ghose published
Dr. Swee Lay Thein and Dr. Stuart Orkin won the $3 million Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences for their work toward a functional cure for the deadly blood disorders sickle cell disease and beta thalassemia.

By Kamal Nahas published
A new and potentially safer opioid has been tested in lab rats, and the results suggest it relieves pain with a lower risk of addiction than other drugs in its class.

By Tia Ghose published
Dr. Paul Broca conducted an autopsy on a patient known as "Tan," who had aphasia, or the inability to speak. Broca's work identified a region of the brain that is key to spoken language.

By Mindy Weisberger published
In a strange medical case, a woman suddenly started hearing voices, and they directed her to seek care for a brain tumor.

By Nicoletta Lanese published
A man known as the "Oslo patient" joins a short list of people in long-term remission from HIV following bone marrow transplants.

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Extraordinary images of our sublime universe

Unusual case reports from the medical literature

A window onto extraordinary landscapes on Earth

A glimpse into how people lived in the past

Incredible images of our planet from above

By Kenna Hughes-Castleberry published
A group of hackers used both Claude Code and ChatGPT in a cybersecurity hack that lasted two and a half months.

By Damien Pine published
For the first time, researchers measured singularities in combined light and sound waves moving faster than the speed of light. The findings have implications in fluid dynamics, optics and many other fields.

By Larissa G. Capella published
For the first time, scientists have observed quantum entanglement in the momentum of massive particles. The result, decades in the making, could help physicists probe the relationship between quantum mechanics and gravity.

By Ben Turner published
INTERVIEW Live Science spoke with Mariah Blake, an investigative journalist and author of the book "They Poisoned The World," about one of the greatest corporate scandals in history.

By Sophie Berdugo published
QUIZ The slingshot around the moon has catapulted the Artemis II mission to legendary status. How much do you know about this iconic mission?

By Maddy Biddulph, Anna Gora last updated
Buying Guide These are the best budget fitness trackers you can buy in every category, from Fitbit Inspire 3 and Xiaomi Smart Band 10 to Garmin Forerunner 165.
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