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

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Scientists Finally Discovered How the Universe Built Giant Ancient Star Clusters

In the vast darkness of space, stars are rarely born alone. They usually form in groups inside enormous clouds of gas and dust called molecular clouds. Some of these groups are small and short-lived, while others become gigantic, tightly packed systems containing millions of stars. These ancient systems are known as globular clusters, and they are among the oldest objects in the Universe. For decades, astronomers have struggled to answer one major question: how did these massive star clusters form? Many scientists believed that globular clusters required rare or “extreme” conditions found only in the early Universe. Some theories suggested violent galaxy collisions, unusual environments, or exotic physical processes were necessary to create them. But new research is changing that idea completely. Scientists Howard, Pudritz, and Harris used advanced radiation-hydrodynamic simulations to study how giant star clusters form inside massive molecular clouds. Their findings suggest something ...

Scientists Have Created a Swallowable Robot That Could Replace Painful Endoscopies

A team of researchers at the TechMed Center of the University of Twente has developed a tiny swallowable soft robot that may completely change how doctors examine the stomach. The device, called SeroTab, can move inside the stomach, measure acidity in real time, and even collect stomach fluid samples — all without batteries, chips, or any traditional electronics. The breakthrough was published in the journal Science Advances and represents a major step toward less invasive medical diagnostics. Instead of forcing patients to undergo uncomfortable endoscopy procedures, doctors may one day simply ask them to swallow a soft robotic tablet. A New Alternative to Traditional Endoscopy Every year, millions of people around the world are advised to get an endoscopy. In this procedure, doctors push a long flexible tube with a camera down the patient’s throat to inspect the stomach and digestive tract. While effective, the process can be uncomfortable, stressful, and expensive. In many parts of t...

This Battery-Free Skin Patch Can Monitor Your Stress, Sugar & Kidney Health in Real Time. Here's How

Imagine checking your stress levels, blood sugar, kidney health, and physical fatigue just by wearing a small patch on your skin — no needles, no bulky machines, and not even a battery. That future may be closer than we think. Researchers at the University of California, Irvine have developed a groundbreaking wearable biosensor that can continuously monitor human health through sweat. The new device, called the In-Situ Regeneratable, Environmentally Stable, Multimodal, Wireless, Wearable Molecular Sweat Sensing System — or simply IREM-W²MS³ — represents a major leap forward in wearable medical technology. Published in the journal Nature Biomedical Engineering, the research introduces a flexible skin patch that works wirelessly, operates without a battery, and can even regenerate itself to maintain long-term accuracy. The invention could open the door to a new generation of smart healthcare devices capable of tracking disease, stress, and overall wellness in real time. A New Era of We...

Scientists Just Turned Ordinary Paper Into Flexible Electronic Circuits

Imagine folding an electronic circuit like a piece of paper, bending it thousands of times, and still having it work perfectly. That idea may sound futuristic, but researchers led by Han and team have developed a remarkable new technology that could make it a reality. Their work introduces a new method for building paper-based electric circuits using liquid metal embedded inside tiny three-dimensional microchannels within paper. This innovation combines the flexibility and low cost of paper with the excellent conductivity of liquid metal, creating soft electronic devices that are lightweight, disposable, environmentally friendly, and surprisingly durable. The technology could open new possibilities in wearable devices, healthcare sensors, flexible electronics, and smart packaging. Why Soft Electronics Matter Traditional electronics are usually made from rigid materials such as silicon and hard metals. While these materials are excellent for computers and smartphones, they are not idea...

Black Holes May Twist Light After Cosmic Collisions

When two black holes collide, the universe shakes. These violent cosmic events create gravitational waves — ripples in spacetime first directly detected in 2015 by the LIGO Scientific Collaboration. Since then, scientists have used these waves to study some of the most extreme objects in the cosmos. But what if black holes leave behind another signal besides gravitational waves? A new study by Huang and collaborators suggests they do. According to their research, black holes may also “twist” the polarization of light around them during the final stage after a merger. This effect could create visible oscillations in light polarization that directly mirror the ringing vibrations of spacetime itself. The discovery opens a completely new way to study black holes — not just through gravitational waves, but through polarized light. What Happens After Black Holes Merge? When two black holes merge, they briefly form a highly disturbed black hole that vibrates before settling down into a stable...

Scientists Built Smart Rings That Help People Understand Sign Language in Real Time

Imagine talking with someone using sign language and instantly seeing their words appear as text on your phone or computer. What once sounded like science fiction is now becoming reality. Researchers in South Korea have created an innovative system of seven smart rings that can translate sign language into text in real time. This breakthrough technology could help remove one of the biggest communication barriers between deaf and hearing communities. The new invention, called WRSLT (Wirelessly Connected Ring-Type Sign Language Translator), was introduced in a study published in the journal Science Advances. The wearable system uses artificial intelligence (AI), motion sensors, and wireless communication to recognize hand movements and convert them into written language with impressive accuracy. Why Sign Language Translation Matters For millions of deaf and hard-of-hearing people around the world, sign language is not simply a collection of hand gestures. It is a complete language with i...

Scientists Just Created a “Thermal Barcode” Technology That Could Make Objects Invisible to Infrared Cameras

Imagine a surface that can control heat the same way a screen controls light. Instead of glowing brighter or dimmer to our eyes, it changes how it appears to infrared cameras. A new breakthrough from researchers at Carnegie Mellon University may have turned that idea into reality. The research team has developed a tiny programmable device that can manipulate thermal radiation with incredible precision. Their work, published in Science Advances , introduces a new concept called “digitized heat.” The technology works like a thermal display made of invisible pixels, opening the door to advanced thermal camouflage, smart sensing systems, and future wearable technologies. At first glance, the invention may sound futuristic, but its core idea is surprisingly simple: control heat the way computers control information. Why Heat Is So Hard to Control Every object around us emits thermal radiation. Humans, animals, machines, buildings, and even your phone constantly release invisible infrared en...