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Scientists Discover Way to Send Information into Black Holes Without Using Energy

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Scientists Create AI-Powered Pen Device That Could Detect Cancer in Real Time

A team of researchers from Rice University and The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center has developed a groundbreaking handheld imaging device that could dramatically improve how cancer is detected. The new technology, called PrecisionView, combines artificial intelligence with advanced optical imaging to help doctors identify cancer in real time without relying heavily on invasive biopsies. The research was recently published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences and is being seen as a major step forward in medical imaging and early cancer diagnosis. A New Approach to Detecting Cancer Early detection remains one of the most important factors in improving cancer survival rates. When cancer is discovered at an early stage, treatment is usually more effective, less invasive, and less expensive. However, many cancers are still diagnosed too late because current diagnostic methods have important limitations. Today, doctors often rely on biopsies, where a s...

Scientists Finally Found a Way to Hold Living Cells in Place Without Damaging Them

Understanding how living cells respond to physical forces is one of the biggest challenges in modern biology. Cells inside the human body constantly experience pressure, stretching, fluid flow, and mechanical stress. These physical signals influence everything from blood circulation and immune responses to wound healing and disease progression. But studying these effects in the laboratory has always been difficult, especially for cells that do not naturally stick to surfaces. Traditional methods for immobilising, or holding cells in place, often damage the cells, require chemical coatings, or fail under strong fluid flow conditions. Now, researchers led by Soffe and team have developed a new technique that could solve many of these problems. Their method uses a phenomenon called dielectrophoresis to quickly and safely immobilise cells inside tiny microfluidic devices. Unlike older methods, the technique is label-free, fast, stable, and minimizes harm to the cells. Most importantly, the...

Scientists Create a Smart Surface That Can Move Water Droplets Like Tiny Robots

In a breakthrough that could transform the future of medical testing, chemical analysis, and lab-on-a-chip technologies, researchers led by Seo and team have developed an innovative method to control tiny water droplets on a flexible superhydrophobic surface. Their new system can move, merge, mix, and precisely manipulate droplets without using pumps, electric fields, magnetic forces, or chemical additives. The technology relies on a stretchable material called polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) covered with microscopic pillar structures. By applying vacuum pressure underneath the material, the researchers create small dimple-like deformations on the surface. These dimples dynamically change how strongly water droplets stick to the surface, allowing the droplets to move in a highly controlled way. This seemingly simple idea could have enormous implications for next-generation microfluidic devices, especially in biology, medicine, and chemical sensing. What Is Microfluidics? Microfluidics is ...

Why Stars Slow Down Before They Die: Scientists Finally May Have the Answer

For decades, astronomers have known something strange about stars: as they age, they spin more slowly. A star that once rotated rapidly during its youth can end its life spinning 100 to 1,000 times slower. But exactly why this dramatic slowdown happens has remained one of astronomy’s biggest mysteries. Now, a new study from researchers at Kyoto University may finally provide a breakthrough explanation. Using advanced 3D simulations of massive stars, the team discovered how magnetic fields, convection, and rotation work together deep inside stars to control how fast they spin over time. Their findings, published in The Astrophysical Journal, could reshape our understanding of stellar evolution and even help scientists better predict how stars explode at the end of their lives. The Mystery of Slowing Stars Stars are not motionless objects. From the moment they form, they rotate. Some spin incredibly fast, completing a rotation in only a few hours or days. But observations show that stars...

Harvard Scientists Create “Living Implants” That Use Bacteria to Fight Infection From Inside the Body

For years, scientists have imagined a future where bacteria could work like tiny doctors inside the human body — detecting disease, releasing medicine exactly where it is needed, and helping treat infections or even cancer. But there has always been one major problem: how do you stop those engineered bacteria from escaping and harming the patient? Now, researchers from Harvard University may have found an important solution. In a new study published in Science, the team developed a new material capable of safely containing engineered bacteria while still allowing them to function as tiny drug-producing factories inside the body. The breakthrough could move scientists one step closer to a future where “living medicines” become part of everyday healthcare. Why Scientists Want to Use Bacteria as Medicine Bacteria are often linked with disease, but many scientists see them as powerful medical tools. Unlike traditional drugs that spread throughout the entire body, engineered bacteria can tr...

Webb Telescope Uncovers One of the Universe’s First Galaxies

The universe still holds many mysteries about how the first stars and galaxies were born. Now, scientists using the powerful James Webb Space Telescope have made an extraordinary discovery that may help answer one of astronomy’s biggest questions. Researchers have detected a tiny ancient galaxy called LAP1-B exactly as it appeared around 13 billion years ago — only 800 million years after the Big Bang. This makes it one of the earliest and most primitive galaxies ever observed. Even more exciting, the galaxy may contain chemical evidence linked to the universe’s very first stars, known as Population III stars. These stars are believed to have changed the young universe forever by creating the first heavy elements and helping galaxies grow. The discovery gives scientists a rare opportunity to look back in time and study the universe during its earliest stages of formation. Looking Back in Time With Webb The James Webb Space Telescope, launched in 2021, was designed to observe the oldest...

Scientists Found a Surprisingly Simple Way to Stop Batteries From Dying

Lithium-ion batteries power much of the modern world. They run smartphones, laptops, electric vehicles, renewable energy systems, and even large data centers. But despite their importance, one major problem continues to limit battery life: over time, the internal materials inside batteries begin to crack and degrade. Now, researchers at the SLAC-Stanford Battery Center have discovered a surprisingly simple way to make lithium-ion batteries last much longer without adding expensive materials or changing the battery’s chemistry. Their breakthrough could help create more durable batteries for electric vehicles, grid-scale energy storage, and many other technologies that rely on long-lasting power. The study, published in Nature Energy, shows that carefully controlling the heating process during battery manufacturing can dramatically improve battery stability and lifespan. Why Lithium-Ion Batteries Fail Inside every lithium-ion battery are two important components called electrodes: the an...