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

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Scientists Just Created a Crystal That Was Never Supposed to Exist And It Shows Quantum Behavior at Room Temperature

In a breakthrough that could transform the future of materials science and quantum technology, researchers have successfully created and stabilized a mysterious crystal structure that had never been observed before. By carefully stacking specially designed silver nanoparticles like tiny LEGO bricks, scientists captured a transitional state of matter that had previously existed only in theoretical models. The discovery not only solves a long-standing scientific puzzle about how crystal structures change but also reveals remarkable quantum properties that can operate at room temperature. These findings could eventually lead to advances in quantum computing, sensing technologies, and next-generation optical devices. The research was carried out by scientists from Brown University and the University of Michigan and was published in the prestigious journal Science . A Missing Piece in Materials Science For decades, scientists have studied how metals arrange their atoms into crystal struct...

Scientists Create Living “Bio-Stickers” That Can Eat Plastic in the Ocean

Plastic pollution is one of the biggest environmental challenges facing the world today. Every year, millions of tons of plastic waste enter rivers, lakes, and oceans. Over time, this waste spreads across the globe and has now been found in nearly every corner of the ocean—from shallow coastal waters to the deepest ocean trenches on Earth. Plastic is popular because it is durable, lightweight, versatile, and inexpensive. However, those same qualities make it a long-lasting pollutant. Many plastic products can remain in the environment for decades or even centuries before breaking down. As a result, marine animals often become trapped in plastic waste or accidentally eat tiny plastic particles, which can harm ecosystems and food chains. Scientists have been searching for solutions to this growing problem. One promising option has been the development of biodegradable plastics, also known as bioplastics. Unlike traditional petroleum-based plastics, these materials are designed to break d...

Red Dwarf Stars Caught “Eating” Earth-Like Planets

For decades, astronomers have believed that young stars can sometimes destroy and swallow the planets forming around them. Now, a remarkable new study has provided some of the strongest evidence yet that this dramatic process really happens. Scientists have discovered six red dwarf stars that appear to have consumed Earth-like rocky planets, leaving behind a chemical clue that reveals their cosmic feast. The research, published in the journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society , offers an exciting glimpse into the chaotic early lives of planetary systems. It also suggests that planet-swallowing events may be far more common than previously thought—and could even have occurred in the early history of our own solar system. A Stellar Mystery Revealed The discovery was made by researchers from Keele University and University of Exeter, who analyzed thousands of stars in young star clusters. Among these stars, they identified six red dwarfs showing an unusual chemical signatu...

Why Did the Universe’s Biggest Galaxies Stop Making Stars So Early?

The universe is nearly 13.8 billion years old, and many galaxies have spent most of that time steadily creating new stars. Our own Milky Way is a good example. Even today, more than 13 billion years after its birth, it continues to produce stars, although at a relatively slow pace. But astronomers have long been puzzled by a very different group of galaxies. These were some of the most massive galaxies in the early universe, and instead of forming stars for billions of years, they appeared to shut down surprisingly quickly. They were born in spectacular bursts of activity and then stopped making stars only about one billion years later. A new study led by researchers at the Institute of Astronomy, Geophysics, and Atmospheric Sciences at the University of São Paulo (IAG-USP) in Brazil may finally explain why these cosmic giants lived such short and dramatic lives. A Cosmic Mystery Observations of the distant universe show that many massive galaxies formed roughly three to four billion y...

Scientists Discover When a Newborn Neutron Star Gets Its First Solid Crust

Imagine an object so dense that a teaspoon of its material would weigh billions of tons on Earth. Now imagine that this object is born in one of the most violent explosions in the Universe and begins its life as a giant ball of extremely hot matter. This is exactly how a neutron star is born. A new study by astrophysicists Kojiro Suwa and Ken'ichiro Nakazato has shed light on an important question about these fascinating objects: How long does it take for a newborn neutron star to develop its first solid crust? Their research suggests that the first solid layer appears surprisingly quickly—within just a few minutes after the star is born. The Birth of a Neutron Star Neutron stars are created when massive stars run out of fuel and explode as supernovae. During the explosion, the star's core collapses under its own gravity, squeezing matter to incredible densities. The result is a newborn neutron star, but scientists call this early stage a protoneutron star (PNS) . Right after ...

Why Some Cancers Are Worse Than Others?

In a quiet laboratory at Virginia Tech, graduate student Megan Sweet performs a task that sounds almost surgical in its precision—and strangely meditative in its repetition. She slices tumors. Inside a chilled metal box, Sweet carefully positions a tiny tumor grown in a lab mouse. With steady hands and intense focus, she slowly brings the tissue closer to a razor-sharp blade. Then comes the rhythmic sound: chunk, chunk, chunk. “This is the hardest and most time-consuming part,” Sweet explains. “But it’s also kind of meditative.” What she produces are not ordinary cuts. The tumor slices are so thin they become almost translucent. Each one is carefully transferred onto a glass slide, later stained, and examined under a high-powered microscope. Slice. Stain. Stare. Compare. This cycle repeats daily in labs at Virginia Tech, forming the backbone of research that is helping scientists understand one of medicine’s biggest mysteries: why some cancers are aggressive and deadly, while others gr...

Scientists Create a Soft Wearable Ultrasound Patch That Watches Unborn Babies in Real Time

A team of engineers at the University of California San Diego has developed a soft, wearable ultrasound patch that can continuously monitor a fetus for hours at a time. Unlike traditional ultrasound scans, which provide only brief snapshots of fetal health, this new device stays on the mother’s body and tracks the baby in real time—even as both the fetus and umbilical cord move during pregnancy. This breakthrough could change prenatal care, especially for high-risk pregnancies where constant monitoring can make the difference between early intervention and missed warning signs. In early clinical testing, the device even detected abnormal fetal signals that led doctors to perform an early Cesarean delivery. Researchers believe this timely intervention may have helped save the baby’s life. The study, published in Nature Biotechnology , also highlights how this technology could expand access to prenatal care in low-resource regions where trained ultrasound technicians and advanced hospita...