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

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These AI Drones Learn to Fly Through 5 cm Gaps At High Speed Without Human Control

Modern drones, especially quadrotors, are becoming increasingly capable of complex aerial tasks. Yet one of the most difficult challenges in robotics is still surprisingly simple to describe: flying quickly and precisely through very small gaps. These “aggressive maneuvers” require extreme accuracy, fast reaction, and full use of the drone’s physical capabilities. A recent research direction shows how drones can now learn to perform these movements using onboard sensors and artificial intelligence. Instead of relying on carefully hand-designed control systems, the drone learns how to fly through narrow openings by directly mapping what it sees and senses into control actions. This approach is changing how we think about autonomous flight. The Challenge: Flying Through Tight Gaps at High Speed When a drone flies through open space, small errors in movement do not matter much. But when it tries to pass through a narrow gap—sometimes with only a few centimeters of clearance—there is almo...

A Robot Small Enough to Fit in Your Hand Just Successfully Explored the Moon

For decades, lunar exploration has relied on large spacecraft, powerful rovers, and extensive support from Earth. But a remarkable mission from Japan has shown that even a robot small enough to fit in the palm of your hand can make a meaningful contribution to space exploration. Scientists have successfully demonstrated that miniature robots can operate independently on the Moon, opening the door to a new era of low-cost and highly efficient planetary exploration. The star of this achievement is a tiny rover called Lunar Excursion Vehicle 2 (LEV-2) , also known as SORA-Q . Despite its small size, the rover successfully explored the lunar surface, captured images, and communicated with a lander—all without direct control from Earth. Its success highlights how advanced robotics can overcome the challenges of exploring distant worlds. Why Small Robots Matter in Space Space missions are expensive, and every kilogram launched into space adds significant cost. Engineers constantly look for ...

Scientists Discover Ebola Can Hide in the Human Brain for Years After Recovery

For many people, surviving Ebola virus disease feels like the end of a terrifying battle. Ebola is one of the world's deadliest viruses, causing severe illness and claiming thousands of lives during outbreaks. But new research suggests that even after recovery, the virus may not be completely gone. Scientists have discovered that Ebola can hide deep inside the human body for months or even years, especially in the brain and other areas where the immune system has limited access. A new study published in Nature Microbiology sheds light on how the virus manages to survive for so long and why this hidden presence can sometimes lead to dangerous relapses or even spark new outbreaks. The research was conducted by scientists from the Bernhard Nocht Institute for Tropical Medicine (BNITM), the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, and several international collaborators. Their findings provide some of the clearest evidence yet of how Ebola persists in the human nervous system. The Hid...

Your Brain May Be Secretly Blocking Negative Words Before You Even Hear Them

Every day, our brains process an enormous amount of information. Conversations, sounds, advertisements, social media posts, and background noise constantly compete for our attention. Most people assume that emotionally negative words—such as insults, threats, or disturbing statements—are especially difficult to ignore. After all, a harsh comment or alarming phrase often seems to stand out immediately. But a fascinating new study suggests that our brains may be doing something unexpected behind the scenes. Instead of prioritizing negative words, the unconscious mind may actually be filtering them out before they ever reach conscious awareness. Researchers from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem discovered that people were less likely to consciously notice negative spoken words than neutral words, even when those words were clearly present in what they were hearing. The findings provide a new glimpse into how the brain decides what information deserves our attention and what information ...

Scientists Develop Carbon Monoxide-Based Therapy That Could Stop Cancer From Spreading

Cancer becomes far more dangerous when it spreads from its original location to other parts of the body. This process, known as metastasis, is responsible for the majority of cancer-related deaths worldwide. Now, researchers have developed a surprising new strategy that may help prevent this deadly spread: using carefully controlled amounts of carbon monoxide. In a recent preclinical study published in Advanced Science , scientists at Weill Cornell Medicine created a new metal-free carbon monoxide prodrug that significantly reduced the spread of pancreatic cancer and triple-negative breast cancer in animal models. The findings could open the door to a completely new way of preventing cancer recurrence after treatment. Why Cancer Spread Is So Difficult to Stop For many cancer patients, surgery and chemotherapy successfully remove or destroy most of the tumor. However, even after treatment appears successful, tiny numbers of cancer cells can remain hidden in the body. These surviving cel...

Scientists Measure Time Without Using A Clock At All

For centuries, time has been one of the greatest mysteries in science. We experience it every day as seconds, minutes, and hours passing by. We remember the past, live in the present, and move toward the future. But what if time is not a fundamental part of the universe at all? What if time is something that emerges naturally from the way matter behaves? A groundbreaking experiment by Professor Giovanni Barontini from the University of Birmingham has brought scientists one step closer to answering this profound question. By creating a tiny “mini-universe” inside a laboratory, researchers have demonstrated that time may not require a clock to exist. Instead, it can emerge from changes occurring within a system itself. The findings, published in Physical Review Research, provide the first controlled experimental evidence that time can arise from internal processes rather than from an external ticking clock. This remarkable work could reshape our understanding of the universe, quantum me...

Scientists Build the World’s First Working Nuclear Clock

For decades, physicists have dreamed of creating a clock so accurate that it could redefine how humanity measures time. Now, that dream has become a reality. Two independent research teams—one in China and the other in Europe—have successfully built working nuclear clocks, achieving a milestone that scientists have pursued for years. The breakthrough was made by researchers led by Beichen Huang at Tsinghua University and Luca Toscani De Col at the Vienna Center for Quantum Science and Technology in Austria. Their studies, recently published as preprints on arXiv, demonstrate that nuclear clocks are no longer just a theoretical idea. They are now real devices capable of measuring time with extraordinary precision. Many scientists believe these clocks could eventually outperform even the best atomic clocks in existence today, opening the door to revolutionary advances in science, navigation, and our understanding of the universe. Why Accurate Timekeeping Matters Timekeeping may seem ...