Novice - Znanost (angleščina)

Could reusable rockets make solar geoengineering less risky?
17. June 2025 (22:30)
Injecting aerosols into the atmosphere – but at higher altitudes than planes can reach – could cool the climate while avoiding some of the downsides of lower-altitude solar geoengineering (New Scientist)
Biotech firm aims to create ‘ChatGPT of biology’ – will it work?
17. June 2025 (22:13)
A UK biotech firm spent years gathering genetic data that has uncovered 1 million previously unknown microbial species and billions of newly identified genes – but even this trove of data may not be enough to train an AI biologist (New Scientist)
Cryopreserved sea star larvae could enable vital species to recover
17. June 2025 (22:00)
Sea star larvae have been stored at −200°C and thawed for the first time, a step towards restoring populations that have been ravaged by disease (New Scientist)
Your forgotten memories continue to influence the choices you make
17. June 2025 (19:14)
We might not think we remember something, but attempting to recall it still fires up activity in our brain linked to memory, which seems to direct our behaviours (New Scientist)
The surprisingly big impact the small intestine has on your health
17. June 2025 (18:00)
The workings of the small intestine have long been a mystery, but now we are discovering the hidden roles this organ plays in appetite, metabolism and the microbiome – and how to look after it better (New Scientist)
Searching for the past and future of quantum physics on a tiny island
17. June 2025 (16:57)
According to scientific legend, quantum mechanics was born on the island of Helgoland in 1925. A hundred years later, physicists are still debating the true nature of this strange theory - and recently returned to the island to discuss its future (New Scientist)
The prospectors hunting hydrogen along a US continental rift
16. June 2025 (23:00)
A gaggle of companies are searching the US Midwest for underground hydrogen fuel produced by a billion-year-old split in the continent – New Scientist visited one of the first to start drilling (New Scientist)
The Milky Way's black hole may be spinning at top speed
16. June 2025 (22:00)
Using machine learning to analyse data from the Event Horizon Telescope, researchers found the black hole at the centre of our galaxy is spinning almost as fast as possible (New Scientist)
The radical idea that space-time remembers could upend cosmology
16. June 2025 (18:00)
There are new hints that the fabric of space-time may be made of "memory cells" that record the whole history of the universe. If true, it could explain the nature of dark matter and much more (New Scientist)
Stunning pictures show the first ever artificial solar eclipse
16. June 2025 (17:30)
The Proba-3 mission, consisting of two spacecraft that fly in close formation to study the sun, has returned images of the first ever artificial solar eclipse (New Scientist)