Novice (angleščina) - New Scientist

How a US agriculture agency became key in the fight against bird flu
13. June 2025 (23:00)
Amidst an ongoing outbreak of a deadly bird flu virus in livestock, the US Department of Agriculture is doing more to prevent the spread than public health agencies are (New Scientist)
Earth’s mantle may have hidden plumes venting heat from its core
13. June 2025 (21:37)
A ‘ghost plume’ identified deep in the mantle beneath Oman suggests there may be more heat flowing out of Earth’s core than previously thought (New Scientist)
Giant atoms 'trapped' for record time at room temperature
13. June 2025 (21:00)
Putting unusually large atoms in a box with cold copper sides helped researchers control them for an unprecedented 50 minutes at room-temperature, an improvement necessary for building more powerful quantum computers and simulators (New Scientist)
Perseverance rover may hold secrets to newly discovered Mars volcano
13. June 2025 (20:00)
There appears to be a volcano near Jezero crater on Mars and the Perseverance rover might already have samples from it that we could use to precisely date the activity of another planet's volcano for the first time (New Scientist)
Microwaves seem to experience imaginary time – and now we know how
13. June 2025 (19:00)
Almost a decade ago, researchers calculated that microwaves can seemingly spend an imaginary amount of time within a material – now an experiment reveals how the phenomenon is perfectly real (New Scientist)
Blood vessel organoids quickly minimise damage to injured tissue
13. June 2025 (18:00)
Blood vessels grown in the lab in just five days could quickly prevent the tissue damage that can occur after an accident (New Scientist)
Is superintelligent AI just around the corner, or just a sci-fi dream?
13. June 2025 (16:30)
Tech CEOs are promising increasingly outlandish visions of the 2030s, powered by "superintelligence", but the reality is that even the most advanced AI models can still struggle with simple puzzles (New Scientist)
Why John Stewart Bell has been haunting quantum mechanics for decades
12. June 2025 (21:33)
The “Bell test” was devised in the 1960s to uncover what’s going on in the quantum world, but it continues to be relevant today, says Karmela Padavic-Callaghan (New Scientist)
Complex blood vessel nets could be 3D printed for artificial organs
12. June 2025 (21:00)
Artificial organ transplants have been held back by the difficulty of making networks of blood vessels - a problem scientists are now taking steps to overcome (New Scientist)
The Vera Rubin Observatory is about to completely transform astronomy
12. June 2025 (18:27)
With the ability to scan the entire southern night sky every three days, the huge Vera Rubin Observatory could be about to start to solving the mysteries of the universe, from dark matter to Planet Nine (New Scientist)