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

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Astronomers Discover a New Way to Weigh Baby Planets

Deep in space, young stars are surrounded by enormous swirling disks of gas and dust. Inside these disks, new planets slowly begin to form. For years, astronomers have observed mysterious bright rings inside these dusty disks, believing they could be signs of hidden newborn planets. Now, a team of astronomers has discovered a powerful new method to estimate the masses of these invisible worlds simply by studying the dust rings around them. The breakthrough research, led by scientists from the University of Warwick in collaboration with researchers from MIT and McMaster University, has been published in The Astrophysical Journal . Their findings could transform the way astronomers search for and study planets that are still buried deep inside their birth environments. The Mystery of Planet-Forming Disks When stars are born, they are surrounded by giant rotating disks made of gas, dust, and tiny rocky particles. These are known as protoplanetary disks. Over millions of years, material in...

Scientists Built a Robot That Rolls Into a Ball Just Like an Armadillo To Protect Itself!

Nature has always been a powerful teacher for engineers. From birds inspiring airplanes to kingfisher beaks improving bullet trains, biology often holds solutions to complex engineering problems. Now, scientists have turned to a surprising animal—the armadillo—to design a new kind of smart protective structure that can automatically curl into a strong shield when it senses danger. This new invention could help protect fragile electronics, soft robots, and sensitive devices that are easily damaged by impact or pressure. The research introduces a system that behaves like a living organism: flexible when relaxed, but instantly defensive when threatened. The work has been published in the journal Science Advances , and it represents a major step forward in the field of soft robotics and adaptive materials. Why Scientists Looked at Armadillos Armadillos are small mammals known for their hard, segmented armor. When they feel threatened, some species roll themselves into a tight ball, using t...

Scientists Built a Sea Urchin Like Robot That Doesn’t Need to Turn — It Moves in All Directions at Once

For a long time, nature has been the biggest inspiration for robotics. From the symmetry of a butterfly’s wings to the radial shape of a starfish or sea urchin, living organisms show how elegant design can produce strength, stability, and adaptability. Engineers have tried to copy these forms for decades, building robots that look like humans, dogs, insects, and even snakes. But a new breakthrough from roboticists at Duke University suggests something very different: maybe the future of robotics is not about how a robot looks , but about how evenly it can move in every direction . This idea has led to a completely new kind of machine called Argus —a robot that has no front, no back, and no obvious “correct” orientation. Instead, it is designed to move equally well in all directions, no matter how it is positioned in space. The research has been published in the journal Science Robotics . Beyond Shape: A New Way to Think About Robots Traditionally, robotics has focused heavily on form. ...

Scientists Create “Quantum Glass” That Sees Inside the Body with Less Radiation & Works Underwater

X-rays are one of the most important tools in modern medicine and security. Doctors use them to look inside the human body and detect broken bones, infections, or tumors. Airport security systems use them to scan luggage without opening it. But despite their usefulness, traditional X-ray imaging has limitations—especially when it comes to radiation exposure, image clarity, and flexibility of the scanning equipment. Now, scientists have developed a new type of X-ray imaging screen that could solve many of these problems at once. Reported in ACS Energy Letters , the new material improves how X-rays are converted into visible light, producing sharper images while requiring less radiation. Even more surprisingly, the technology works underwater and can be shaped into curved surfaces—something that could change the future of medical scanning, especially for procedures like mammography. 🔬 What Makes X-ray Imaging Work? To understand this breakthrough, it helps to know how X-ray imaging norm...

This Breakthrough Technology Turns Seawater Into Fresh Water Without Pollution or Waste

Clean drinking water is becoming one of the biggest global challenges of our time. According to the United Nations, around 2.2 billion people still lack safely managed drinking water . To meet growing demand, many countries—ranging from the United States (especially California) to Middle Eastern nations—depend on desalination plants that convert seawater into freshwater. However, traditional desalination methods come with serious problems. A new breakthrough from researchers at the University of Rochester offers a promising solution that could change how the world produces fresh water. The Problem with Current Desalination Methods Today, two main technologies are used to convert seawater into drinking water: 1. Reverse Osmosis (RO) This method pushes seawater through very fine membranes to filter out salt. 2. Thermal Distillation This process heats seawater, turns it into vapor, and then condenses it back into liquid water. While both methods work, they have major drawbacks: They req...

Scientists Capture First-Ever Evidence of Atoms Reverse Their Spin in Real Time

A new breakthrough in quantum physics has revealed something that sounds almost impossible: atoms inside a crystal can briefly “spin backward” when energy moves through them. Scientists have directly observed angular momentum—the property responsible for rotation—traveling through a crystal lattice, and in the process, they found a surprising reversal of direction that challenges simple intuition about how motion behaves at the atomic scale. The discovery was made using extremely powerful terahertz laser pulses that can trigger and track motion inside materials on ultra-fast timescales. What the researchers saw was not just movement, but a strange transformation: atomic rotations inside a quantum material flipped direction as they were transferred from one vibration mode to another. This work was carried out by an international team of scientists from institutes including the Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf, the Fritz Haber Institute of the Max Planck Society, and several research...

This 4.4 mm Robot Can Cut Tissue, Deliver Drugs, and Fight Disease Inside the Human Body

Medical technology is steadily moving toward a future where treatments become smaller, smarter, and less invasive. Imagine a tiny robot, no bigger than a seed, traveling inside the human body to deliver medicine exactly where it is needed, collect tissue samples, cut diseased tissue, or even help fight cancer—all without major surgery. What once seemed like science fiction is now becoming reality. Scientists at Nanyang Technological University (NTU), Singapore , have developed a groundbreaking miniature robot that may significantly change the future of medical treatment. The robot, which is only 4.4 millimeters long , is about the size of a small seed and can perform five different surgical functions wirelessly . The study, led by Lum Guo Zhan and published in the journal Advanced Materials, marks a major step toward highly precise and minimally invasive surgeries. A Tiny Robot With Big Abilities Miniature robots have attracted attention from researchers around the world because they ...