Skip to main content

Posts

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

Recent posts

A Breakthrough Non-Stick Medical Coating Could Help Stop Hospital Infections Before They Start

Hospital-acquired infections are one of the biggest hidden challenges in modern healthcare. Even when hospitals are clean, dangerous microbes can still survive on surfaces like bed rails, medical tools, and door handles. Now, researchers from the University of Toronto have developed a new type of non-toxic surface coating that may significantly reduce this risk by stopping proteins—and therefore bacteria—from sticking in the first place. This innovation could change how we think about cleanliness in hospitals, moving from constant chemical disinfection to smarter, safer surfaces that naturally resist contamination. Why cleaning alone is not enough Right now, hospitals mainly rely on strong chemical disinfectants like bleach to kill germs on surfaces. This approach is effective, but it comes with serious drawbacks. Professor Kevin Golovin, who leads the Durable Repellent Engineered Advanced Materials (DREAM) Laboratory at the University of Toronto Engineering, explains the problem clear...

This Material Can “Remember” Information (Like A Computer) Just by Being Spun

A simple slap bracelet looks like a toy. You tap it, and it instantly curls around your wrist. Tap it again, and it becomes straight. This quick “snap” feels fun, but behind it is a serious scientific principle that is now inspiring cutting-edge research in robotics and smart materials. Scientists have discovered that this same snapping behavior is closely related to something called bistability —a property where a structure can exist in two stable states. Even more exciting, researchers are now using this idea to store and process information inside physical materials themselves, without electronics. This new approach could change how we build robots, medical devices, and even future computing systems. What Makes a Structure “Bistable”? A bistable structure is one that can rest in two different stable shapes without needing constant energy to hold either state. Think of it like a light switch: Up = ON (state 1) Down = OFF (state 0) Similarly, bistable materials can switch between: A s...

A Black Hole Disappearing Into a Wormhole? This Signal Could Prove Wormhole Might Exist

In recent years, our understanding of the Universe has changed dramatically. One of the biggest breakthroughs came in 2015, when scientists detected gravitational waves for the first time. These are tiny ripples in spacetime caused by massive cosmic events, like two black holes crashing into each other. This discovery confirmed an important idea from Albert Einstein’s theory of general relativity and opened a completely new way to study the Universe. Since then, scientists have detected many more gravitational-wave events. These observations have helped us learn about black holes, neutron stars, and extreme gravity. But now, researchers are asking a much bigger question: Can gravitational waves help us find completely new and exotic objects, like wormholes? A new study by Malik and his team explores this exciting idea. They show that if a black hole falls into a wormhole, it could produce a special type of gravitational-wave signal—one that we might be able to detect with current techn...

Black Holes May Live Much Longer Than We Thought

Black holes are often imagined as simple cosmic objects—formed when massive stars collapse and slowly disappearing over time through a process known as Hawking radiation. But recent research by Bianchi and his team challenges this straightforward picture. Their work suggests that black holes may live much longer than previously believed, especially when we consider how information escapes from them. This discovery is not just about how black holes evaporate—it also touches on one of the biggest mysteries in physics: what happens to information that falls into a black hole? Understanding Black Hole Evaporation According to earlier theories, black holes lose mass over time by emitting Hawking radiation. This process is slow for large black holes but speeds up as they shrink. Eventually, the black hole reaches a tiny size close to what physicists call the “Planck scale,” where quantum effects become very important. In simple terms, the time it takes for a black hole to evaporate during th...

A Storm on Saturn Just Broke a 15-Year Weather Cycle. Here’s How It Happened

The atmospheres of planets like Earth, Jupiter, and Saturn may seem completely different at first glance. Earth has oceans, continents, and familiar weather systems. Jupiter and Saturn are giant gas planets with no solid surface and massive storms that can last for centuries. Yet, scientists have discovered something surprising: all three planets share a similar deep atmospheric rhythm in their equatorial regions. This rhythm appears as a repeating pattern of changing winds and temperatures high above the surface. Even more fascinating is the fact that this pattern is not isolated or stable. It can be disrupted by powerful storms happening far away from the equator. This discovery helps scientists understand how planetary atmospheres are connected in ways we are only beginning to uncover. A Hidden Cycle in Earth’s Atmosphere On Earth, there is a well-known phenomenon called the quasi-biennial oscillation, or QBO. It takes place in the lower stratosphere, about 16 to 50 kilometers above...

Tiny Worms Are Building Towers in Rotting Fruit… And No One Knew Why Until Now

In 2025, scientists in Konstanz, Germany, made a surprising discovery in local orchards. While studying rotting fruit, they noticed something no one had clearly documented in nature before—tiny worms, in huge numbers, forming strange vertical structures. These living stacks, called “worm towers,” were not random. The worms were actively organizing themselves into rising columns, twisting upward as if searching for something beyond the fruit. What made this even more remarkable was that this behavior had previously been seen only under controlled laboratory conditions. Seeing it happening naturally in orchards changed everything. It suggested that these worms were not just passive organisms living in decaying fruit—they were actively behaving in ways that might help them survive and spread. A Strange Strategy for Survival Back in the laboratory, researchers tested what these worm towers could do. They exposed them to fruit flies and observed something fascinating: the towers could attac...

Scientists Just Discovered How Plants “Build Their Own Walls” And It Changes Everything

Plants surround us everywhere—from towering trees to the food on our plate—but behind this everyday beauty lies one of biology’s most important and least understood processes: how plant cell walls are formed. A new discovery from researchers at Washington State University is now shedding light on this mystery. Scientists have identified the first known signaling pathway that tells plant cells when and how to transform internal structures into external cell walls. This breakthrough not only explains a fundamental step in plant life but may also help improve nutrition and biofuel production in the future. 🌱 Why Cell Walls Matter So Much Cell walls are one of the defining features of plant life. Unlike animal cells, plant cells are surrounded by a rigid outer layer called the cell wall. This structure is not just a protective shell—it is essential for life on Earth. Cell walls: Give plants their shape and strength Protect cells from damage Store important nutrients Contain materials use...