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

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The Galaxy That Lost 95% of Its Brightness in 20 Years

Imagine looking into the night sky and seeing a galaxy, billions of light-years away, slowly dimming its light before your eyes. This is not science fiction—it is exactly what astronomers have recently observed. About ten billion light-years from Earth , a galaxy known as J0218−0036 has experienced an astonishing decrease in brightness, dropping to one-twentieth of its original luminosity in just twenty years. This rare cosmic event offers a window into the dramatic lives of galaxies and the supermassive black holes at their centers. A Rare Discovery Across Time and Space An international team of astronomers led by the Chiba Institute of Technology uncovered this extraordinary phenomenon. By combining multi-wavelength observations —from optical to infrared and radio—with archival data spanning decades , the researchers traced how the galaxy's central brightness sharply declined. They concluded that the cause was a rapid decrease in the flow of gas into the galaxy's supermass...

This Device Can Control Your Heart With a Flick of Light

 Imagine a device that can make heart cells beat in perfect rhythm using nothing but light—no metal wires, no electrodes, just soft, flexible materials interacting directly with living tissue. Researchers at the University of California, Irvine, have turned this vision into reality with the creation of a polymeric biohybrid cardiac device that can electrically and mechanically control heart tissue using light. Published in Cell Biomaterials , this innovation marks a major leap forward in how heart disease is studied, cardiac drugs are tested, and potentially how life-saving therapies are delivered in the future. A New Approach to Cardiac Stimulation Traditional methods of controlling heart cells in the lab rely on rigid metal electrodes. While effective at generating electrical signals, these electrodes come with significant drawbacks. Over time, they can damage delicate tissue, introduce contamination, or fail to mimic the natural environment of the beating heart. The UC Irvine t...

Meet RoboGullet: The Robotic Esophagus That Can Swallow Like a Human

Imagine struggling every time you try to swallow. For millions of people worldwide, this is a daily reality. Difficulty swallowing, medically known as dysphagia , affects roughly 20% of the global population and up to 50% of people over 60. Despite its prevalence, research into the condition has long been limited by the lack of accurate models of the human esophagus—the muscular tube that moves food from the mouth to the stomach. Now, researchers at University College Dublin (UCD) , in collaboration with Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and Harvard Medical School , have developed a groundbreaking robotic model called RoboGullet . This innovative system can realistically replicate the complex mechanics of human swallowing, opening new doors for diagnosis, treatment, and research. The study, published in Nature Communications , marks a major leap forward in the fight against dysphagia. Understanding the Challenge of Swallowing Disorders Swallowing is a surprisingly complex pr...

Scientists Turn Wood into 3D-Printable Material That Glows Without Power

Imagine a world where wood not only builds furniture and homes but also lights up without electricity. That world may be closer than we think. Scientists at Northeast Forestry University (NEFU) in China have created a 3D-printable wood material that emits a bright glow even after the ultraviolet light that activates it is turned off. This breakthrough transforms ordinary wood powder into a functional material, opening doors to new applications in design, sensing, and sustainable technology. How Wood Can Glow The secret lies in the chemical treatment of wood powder. Normally, wood is just a natural material made of cellulose, hemicellulose, and lignin. But the NEFU team, led by associate professor Yingxiang Zhai, modified the wood powder by attaching oxygen-rich chemical groups. This small change allowed the wood to be printable in water and, at the same time, glow after exposure to ultraviolet (UV) light. When UV light hits the printed samples, they store energy. Remarkably, this energ...

UK Builds World’s First Hydrogen-Powered Brick Plant

In a major step toward a cleaner and greener future, the United Kingdom is preparing to build the world’s first commercial-scale hydrogen-fired brick kiln plant . This groundbreaking project aims to transform how bricks are made by replacing traditional fossil fuels with clean hydrogen energy. The initiative is led by Wienerberger UK & Ireland, one of the leading building materials manufacturers. With strong backing from the government, the company is upgrading its Denton brickworks facility in Greater Manchester to run on green hydrogen instead of natural gas. 🌱 A Big Leap Toward Cleaner Manufacturing Brick manufacturing is an energy-intensive process that requires extremely high temperatures. Traditionally, this heat comes from burning natural gas, which releases large amounts of carbon dioxide (CO₂) into the atmosphere. To tackle this issue, the UK government—through its Industrial Energy Transformation Fund—has supported a £6 million upgrade project. The goal is simple but po...

Microscopic Robots That Swim, Sense, and Navigate—Without a Brain!

Imagine a tiny robot, smaller than the width of a human hair, moving through its environment, sensing obstacles, and adapting its behavior—all without sensors, software, or a brain. This is no science fiction. Researchers at Leiden University , led by Professor Daniela Kraft and Mengshi Wei, have developed microscopic robots that behave in ways strikingly similar to living organisms. Reported in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), this breakthrough could open a new era in biomedical technology. Inspired by Nature The inspiration behind these robots comes directly from nature. Professor Kraft explains, “Animals like worms and snakes constantly adapt their shape as they move, which helps them navigate their environment. Large robots use flexibility in the same way. Until now, microrobots were either tiny and rigid or large and flexible. We wanted to create small, flexible microrobots.” By mimicking natural flexibility at the microscopic level, Kraft and Wei have...

Why Some Giant Exoplanets Cool & Shrink Faster Than We Thought

Scientists have discovered thousands of planets outside our Solar System, called exoplanets . Among these, giant exoplanets —huge planets made mostly of gas like Jupiter—are especially interesting. But understanding what is happening deep inside them is tricky. Recent studies show that how heat moves inside a planet is very important for understanding its size, temperature, and even what it is made of. A key factor is something called radiative opacity . What Is Radiative Opacity? Imagine a giant planet as a huge ball of gas. Heat inside the planet wants to escape into space. Radiative opacity tells us how easily that heat can move through the planet. High opacity : Heat is trapped, the planet stays hotter, and cools slowly. Low opacity : Heat escapes more easily, and the planet cools faster. At certain temperatures, around 2000 K , some elements in the planet, like alkali metals , get used up or disappear. This creates an opacity window —a layer where heat can escape more easily. Th...