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

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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...

Scientists Use AI to Reveal How the Sleeping Brain Cleans Itself

Every night while we sleep, our brains perform one of the most important maintenance jobs in the human body. As we drift into deep sleep, a waterlike fluid begins flowing through and around the brain, clearing away harmful waste that builds up during the day. Scientists believe this process plays a major role in protecting the brain from diseases such as Alzheimer’s. Now, researchers have taken a major step toward understanding exactly how this hidden cleaning system works. By combining advanced MRI scans with artificial intelligence, scientists have managed to measure the movement of these fluids in ways that were previously impossible. The breakthrough could eventually help doctors detect brain diseases earlier, monitor concussions, and better understand how aging affects the brain. The Brain’s Hidden Cleaning Network The process is known as the glymphatic system , a recently discovered network that acts like the brain’s waste disposal system. It was first identified in 2012 by pion...

Scientists Discover Hidden Brain Rhythm That May Reveal When We Are Truly Conscious

A team of neuropsychology researchers from Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich (LMU) has uncovered a mysterious brain rhythm that could help scientists better understand consciousness itself. The discovery may eventually lead to improved treatments for neurological disorders such as epilepsy, coma-related conditions, and other diseases affecting awareness and brain function. The study, published in the journal Nature Human Behaviour , focused on a deep brain structure called the thalamus. Researchers found that this small but powerful part of the brain produces a special pattern of electrical activity that appears only when a person is conscious or dreaming. The finding could represent one of the clearest biological signatures of consciousness ever identified in humans. The Brain’s “Gateway” to Consciousness The thalamus is located deep in the center of the brain and acts like a communication hub. It gathers signals from different parts of the brain and sends them to the appropriate...

Scientists Discover Why Tumors Slow Down Under Physical Force

Scientists have uncovered an important reason why physical pressure can slow the growth of cancer tumors — a discovery that could change how future cancer treatments are designed. The breakthrough comes from a multidisciplinary team of researchers from the University of Galway, CÚRAM, the Taighde Éireann–Research Ireland Centre for Medical Devices, and KU Leuven in Belgium. Using an advanced AI-accelerated computational model, the researchers explored how tumors react when they are physically squeezed by surrounding tissues. Their findings reveal that pressure does much more than simply compress a tumor. It directly interferes with the ability of cancer cells to grow and divide. The study was published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) and may open the door to a completely new category of cancer treatment known as mechanotherapy. A Long-Standing Cancer Mystery For many years, scientists have observed something unusual about tumors. Cancer cells are ...

Scientists Create “Smart Tattoo” That Detects Skin Cancer In Just 4 Days Before It Becomes Visible

Skin cancer is one of the most common forms of cancer in the world, and melanoma is its deadliest type. Doctors have long known that early detection can save lives. But there has always been one major problem: the smallest and most dangerous melanomas are often invisible in their earliest stages. Now, researchers in Canada may have found a breakthrough solution. Scientists from the Institut national de la recherche scientifique (INRS), working with researchers from Université de Montréal (UdeM), have developed a futuristic new technology called SMEAR-ULM that can detect melanoma before it becomes visible to the human eye. The new system works by measuring tiny heat changes on the surface of the skin using microscopic needles and glowing nanoparticles. Researchers say the technology could help doctors identify aggressive skin cancers earlier, reduce unnecessary biopsies, and improve survival rates. Their findings were recently published in the scientific journal Nature Sensors . Why Ear...