Bill Gates leads global call to accept realities of a warming planet

A coalition of major global figures say we must do much more to adapt to our rapidly warming world, and we need to do it fast | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

Electric chewing gum zaps your tongue to create a virtual flavour hit

An 'unlimited chewing gum' uses an electric charge to trick you into experiencing flavours – and they don’t fade in the way chewing gum flavour usually does | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

Mysterious cosmic radio signal spotted unusually close to Earth

The first fast radio burst to be detected in a nearby galaxy may provide clues about what – or who – is able to transmit these strange, powerful signals | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

National bans on smacking children linked to less teenage violence

A survey has found that teenagers get into more fights in countries where it is legal to spank children, but there could be several explanations for the link | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

Earliest ever animal fossil is a 660-million-year-old sponge

Chemical evidence locked in rocks and oil suggests that the first animals were alive 100 million years earlier than we thought from fossils | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

Will there be beer shortages as the world warms? Well, maybe

Predictions of beer shortages and rocketing prices as extreme weather hits barley production should not be taken too literally but do highlight a very real problem | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

Rabbit-killing virus may have mutated to kill hares too

Brown hares are turning up dead across the UK, raising fears that myxomatosis – the rabbit infection in ‘Watership Down’ - may have mutated to target hares | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

Just 2.5% of DNA turns mice into men

Mice and men share about 97.5% of their genes, suggests new research – previous estimates were just 85% | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

Wheat flour to be fortified with folic acid in the UK

Folic acid helps prevent birth defects but is most effective taken around the time of conception. Adding it to wheat could benefit unplanned pregnancies | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

Mysterious cosmic radio signal spotted unusually close to Earth

The first fast radio burst to be detected in a nearby galaxy may provide clues about what – or who – is able to transmit these strange, powerful signals | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

Inside the prison experiment that claimed to show the roots of evil

The Stanford prison experiment was the classic demonstration of how power can bring out the worst in us. But now it seems it was more about showbiz than science | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

Traces of mystery ancient humans found lurking in our genomes

Prehistoric humans were sexual adventurers, mating with Neanderthals and Denisovans, but DNA studies reveal dalliances with populations we never knew existed | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

War With the Newts review – this is smart sci-fi theatre at its best

A reimagining of a classic 1930s novel by Karel Capek cleverly immerses us in a terrifying future where a new intelligent species is cruelly exploited | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

On Air preview – Tomás Saraceno is saving the world with balloon art

Forget doomy "Anthropocene" ideas, if we're serious about saving Earth we need hope, says Tomás Saraceno, the artist whose tetrahedral balloons inspire researchers | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

Exascale computers might be too complicated to use

China, Japan and the US are racing to build the first exascale computer – but devising programmes clever enough to run on them is a different story | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

Ultrablack room makes everything disappear except you and the game

More often associated with artistic experiments and the innards of satellites, light-absorbing Vantablack paint may soon be heading to an arcade near you | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

Amateurs used a Chinese satellite to photograph Earth and the moon

A tiny Chinese satellite in lunar orbit is designed to accept commands from amateurs, and has captured a new view of the Earth and its moon | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

Rewilding: Can we really restore ravaged nature to a pristine state?

Vast tracts of land are returning to wilderness as farming retreats worldwide. But rewilding isn't an easy win – and debates rage about how to manage it | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

We can harness algae with magnets to deliver drugs inside our bodies

If we attach tiny magnets to fast-swimming algae, we can load them up with drugs and steer them deep into the human body to deliver targeted medical therapies | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

Humongous fungus is older than Christianity and weighs 400 tonnes

A gigantic fungus that lives under the ground in a Michigan forest is even larger than initially estimated and may have been around for at least 2500 years | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

The US wants a laser weapon that shouts at people before burning them

The US Marines are developing a laser weapon that can shout at people from 100 metres away. It can also be turned up to deafen, dazzle or cause painful burns | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

AIs invent weird new limbs to beat virtual obstacle courses

Simulated robots can learn to control their bodies in many creative ways, and now they can also build the best limbs for crossing through an obstacle course | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

Mice eat too much food if their great grandmother did the same

When mice are given a high-fat diet their great grandchildren are more likely to put on weight – and they show a greater than expected taste for alcohol | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

Police can now use millions more people’s DNA to find criminals

Consumer genetic databases are becoming powerful tools for identifying criminals, and a new technique could link you to forensic data held by US police | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

Soyuz crash could kill the ISS and set space flight back decades

A Russian Soyuz spacecraft has crash landed after an attempted launch to the International Space Station, which may throw a wrench in space flight plans | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

Could the world’s mightiest computers be too complicated to use?

China, Japan and the US are racing to build the first exascale computer – but devising programmes clever enough to run on them is a different story | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

AIs invent weird new limbs to beat virtual obstacle courses

Simulated robots can learn to control their bodies in many creative ways, and now they can also build the best limbs for crossing through an obstacle course | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

Nikon Small World photo competition reveals nature in minuscule detail

Peer into nature with these amazing images from the Nikon Small World microphotography prize. They include a bug bubble house and the eye of a weevil | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

T. rex may have used its long feet for stealthy surprise attacks

Carnivorous dinosaurs generated seismic waves with every footfall – but because of the shape of their feet they may have masked their presence approaching prey | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

Medicinal cannabis will be available in the UK from next month

The UK Home Secretary has announced that doctors will be able to prescribe medicinal cannabis from next month following a specially commissioned review | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

Building better cities

Thanks to clever chemistry and innovative engineering, the cities of the future are being fashioned from cleaner, greener concrete | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

We’ve missed many chances to curb global warming. This may be our last

Keeping warming to a manageable (but still dangerous) 1.5°C is possible, strictly speaking, but it will be the largest project humanity has ever undertaken | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

75-million-year old ocean microbes live forever on almost zero energy

There is so little food in the mud at the bottom of the Pacific Ocean that individual microbes living there use just 0.00000000001 joules of energy each year | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

Astronauts make emergency landing after Soyuz rocket malfunctions

A rocket carrying two people to the International Space Station has just made an emergency landing in Kazakhstan after a booster malfunctioned  | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

Astronauts make emergency landing after Soyuz rocket malfunctions

A rocket carrying two people to the International Space Station has just made an emergency landing in Kazakhstan after a booster malfunctioned  | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

Old homes around the world must be retrofitted to meet climate targets

Countries need to start a massive programme of retrofitting old homes to make them carbon neutral if the world is to meet the global emission reduction target | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

Moons can have moons and they are called moonmoons

If a moon is big enough and far enough from its planet, it can host its own smaller moon, called a ‘moonmoon’ - and four worlds in our solar system fit the bill | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

Great Ormond Street launches hospital of the future with AI and robots

Step inside the hospital of the future, where face recognition tracks everyone who enters and robots roam the corridors | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

We need to get better at supporting people who lose a pregnancy

This week is Baby Loss Awareness Week, but more must be done to help those who, like me, have suffered a loss, says Petra Boynton | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

AI’s dirty secret: Energy-guzzling machines may fuel global warming

Advances in artificial intelligence could lead to massive growth in energy use as smart machines push into every corner of our lives | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

Bees suddenly stopped buzzing in the US during the 2017 solar eclipse

When the moon hid the sun in the 2017 total solar eclipse, bees across the US suddenly stopped buzzing around - only one bee aross 16 locations buzzed | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

Moons can have moons and they are called moonmoons

If a moon is big enough and far enough from its planet, it can host its own smaller moon, called a ‘moonmoon’ - and four worlds in our solar system fit the bill | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

Are Virgin Galactic and Richard Branson really going to space soon?

Richard Branson has said that his space flight company, Virgin Galactic, will go to space “within weeks”. Here’s what you need to know about his claims | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

Rabbits flee when they smell dead relatives in predators’ droppings

Rabbits avoid nibbling grass in areas scattered with predator droppings – particularly if those predators have been fed on bunnies | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

You can recognise around 5000 faces, from family to celebrities

For much of human evolution our ancestors may have encountered only a few hundred people in their lives – but we can each recall about 5000 distinct faces | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

There’s a glitch at the edge of the universe that could remake physics

One mysterious number determines how physics, chemistry and biology work. But controversial experimental hints suggest it's not one number at all | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

Falling rocks can explode so hard that only nuclear weapons beat them

If big rocks fall far enough they can explode with more energy than any non-nuclear bomb – and the ensuing shockwave can snap large trees half a kilometre away | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

Nobody can agree about antidepressants. Here’s what you need to know

For some they are lifesavers, for others ineffective and even addictive. Our special report looks at why even experts disagree on antidepressants, and what the real truth is | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago