Novice (angleščina) - New Scientist

Triumphant images of women who climbed to new heights
23. July 2025 (20:00)
Mountaineering Women: Climbing through history tells the stories of more than a dozen female climbers who have conquered the world's greatest peaks (New Scientist)
The Prestige is just as clever and thrilling 30 years on
23. July 2025 (20:00)
Rival magicians in Victorian England both claim they can teleport. Is this all illusion, asks Emily H. Wilson, as she explores Christopher Priest’s extraordinary novel, The Prestige (New Scientist)
How to spot the Delta Aquariids meteor shower this month
23. July 2025 (20:00)
A new moon in late July will give us dark skies – perfect for spotting this beautiful meteor shower, says Abigail Beall (New Scientist)
Simple skincare routine could stop babies developing eczema
23. July 2025 (18:00)
Keeping a baby's skin moisturised could significantly reduce their risk of eczema - but perhaps only for babies that aren't genetically at risk (New Scientist)
AI helps reconstruct damaged Latin inscriptions from the Roman Empire
23. July 2025 (18:00)
Google DeepMind and historians created an AI tool called Aeneas that can predict the missing words in Latin inscriptions carved into stone walls and pottery sherds from the ancient Roman Empire. (New Scientist)
What were ancient humans thinking when they began to bury their dead?
23. July 2025 (18:00)
Claims that a small-brained hominin called Homo naledi buried its dead raise intriguing questions about ancient minds and why we engage in this peculiar practice (New Scientist)
Spectacular Triassic reptile had an early kind of feathers
23. July 2025 (18:00)
A 247-million-year-old fossil reptile boasted an enormous crest on its back made from feather-like appendages, long before the appearance of feathered dinosaurs (New Scientist)
Gold can be heated to 14 times its melting point without melting
23. July 2025 (18:00)
With fast heating, sheets of gold can shoot past the theoretical maximum temperature a solid can have before it melts – raising questions about what the true limits are (New Scientist)
AI beats goalkeepers at predicting which way penalty taker will shoot
23. July 2025 (14:00)
By analysing videos of penalty kicks, a deep learning model was able to predict whether a shot would go to the goalkeeper’s left or right with 64 per cent accuracy (New Scientist)
Ancient ‘terror birds’ may have been no match for hungry giant caimans
23. July 2025 (02:01)
A 13-million-year-old leg bone from an enormous flightless bird carries crocodilian tooth marks, showing South America was once a predator-eat-predator world (New Scientist)