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Science

Daily Telegraph
01/05/2026 09:50:21 AM
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Scientific American
01/05/2026 09:50:10 AM
TechnologyApril 30, 2026Scientists used AI to rewrite part of life’s alphabet
Scientists just discovered what is fueling cows’ potent burps
Trump ends MAHA activist and wellness influencer Casey Means’s bid for surgeon general
Astronomers puzzle over early origins of mysterious ‘red monster’ galaxy
Scientists know how to phase out fossil fuels. Some countries are listening
A major humpback whale rescue effort is attempting to do something extraordinary
Human genome decoder J. Craig Venter dies at age 79
Should schools limit kids’ screen time? The science is murky
The hidden cause of heart disease is inflammation
How strange new ‘altermagnets’ could rewrite physics
How birds survived the dinosaurs’ doomsday
Space hotels are coming soon
Inside the labs where chemists engineer luxury perfumes
How a lost 1812 wristwatch sparked a 200-year race in precision engineering
Can sunlight cure disease?
Can peanut allergies be cured?
How much vitamin D do you need to stay healthy?
Personalized mRNA vaccines will revolutionize cancer treatment—if funding cuts don’t doom them
New nasal vaccines offer better protection from COVID and flu—no needle needed
These cancers were beyond treatment—but might not be anymore
Particle PhysicsApril 30, 2026What’s faster than light? Darkness
MathematicsApril 28, 2026The Simpsons reference that refutes one of history’s greatest mathematicians
AnimalsApril 28, 2026City birds appear to be more afraid of women than men, and scientists have no idea why
WeatherApril 29, 2026A giant hailstorm just killed an emu at a Missouri zoo
MathematicsApril 24, 2026An amateur just solved a 60-year-old math problem—by asking AI
GeneticsApril 30, 2026Human genome decoder J. Craig Venter dies at age 79

BBC
08/11/2025 05:50:14 AM
Vaccine trial for killer elephant virus begins
Student-built robot on track to explore the Moon
Plants in UK now flowering a month earlier
Slide show that persuaded Boris Johnson on climate
UK cranes have most successful year since 1600s
Earth has more tree species than we thought
Video 2 minutes 13 secondsPoo on menu for Europe's first baby southern koala
Student-built robot on track to explore the Moon
Plants in UK now flowering a month earlier
Slide show that persuaded Boris Johnson on climate
UK cranes have most successful year since 1600s
Earth has more tree species than we thought
Video 2 minutes 13 secondsPoo on menu for Europe's first baby southern koala
Buried treasures threatened by climate change
Toxic 'forever chemicals' found in British otters
'Fragile win' at COP26 climate summit under threat
False banana offers hope for warming world
'Megaberg' dumped huge volume of fresh water
Musk's SpaceX rocket on collision course with moon
James Webb telescope reaches final position
Radar satellite's stunning map of UK and Ireland
Nasa fixes megarocket equipment glitch
Satellites key to understanding Pacific volcano
What is the quantum apocalypse?
US lab takes further step towards fusion goal
Should bad science be censored on social media?
How zoo vets are battling a deadly elephant virus
The illegal Brazilian gold you may be wearing
Student-built robot on track to explore the Moon
Vaccine trial for killer elephant virus begins
Power restored to all but 700 homes after storms
Insulate Britain activists jailed over M25 protest
Rats to be removed from Round Island in Scilly
EU moves to label nuclear and gas as sustainable
New Jurassic fossil find on 'Dinosaur Coast' beach
Walking and cycling face losing out in TfL cuts
Search for survivors after deadly Ecuador landslide
Climate group protests in Royal Courts of Justice
'I'm not afraid of a big pile of waste'
UK cranes have most successful year since 1600s

New Scientist

01/05/2026 09:50:10 AM
PhysicsIs consciousness more fundamental to reality than quantum physics?Features
HealthWhy the keto diet could be a revolutionary way to treat mental illnessFeatures
PhysicsWe need more radioactive drugs. Can we make them from nuclear waste?Features
HealthWhy the right kind of stress is crucial for your health and happinessFeatures
HealthExercise advice for long covid may be doing more harm than goodInsight
MathematicsThe monstrous number sequences that break the rules of mathematicsFeatures
Is consciousness more fundamental to reality than quantum physics?
Why the keto diet could be a revolutionary way to treat mental illness
Exercise advice for long covid may be doing more harm than good
Table tennis-playing robot on track to becoming world champion
HumansWas a little-known culture in Bronze Age Turkey a major power?News
HumansPompeii’s streets show how the city adapted to Roman ruleNews
1Thought-provoking photographs capture what it feels like to have ADHD
2We have figured out a new way to send messages into the past
3100-year-old assumption about the universe may soon be overturned
4The best new science fiction books of May 2026
5Human heads have changed shape a lot in the past 100 years
6Ann Leckie continues to shine with new sci-fi novel Radiant Star
7Is consciousness more fundamental to reality than quantum physics?
8We may finally have a cure for many different autoimmune conditions
9Weird 'transdimensional' state of matter is neither 2D nor 3D
10Cancer is increasing in young people and we still don't know why
HealthBeef is making a comeback – does it fit into a healthy diet?Features
MindHow autoimmune conditions can unexpectedly drive mental illnessFeatures
Discovery TourArctic expedition cruise with Dr Russell Arnott, Svalbard, NorwaySvalbard, Norway17-28 June 2026
Free Online EventUnfinished Business: How do we end HIV?Free Online EventOn Demand Event
Explore all of our podcasts New episodes every week, available wherever you listen to podcasts
New Scientist's video team
Video Why birds are the only surviving dinosaurs Video
Video The evolving science of dinosaurs Video
Video Author Kim Stanley Robinson revisits his vision of life on Mars Video
Video Why quantum physics says there’s a multiverse Video
Video James Maynard: uncovering the secrets of prime numbers Video
Video We might be wrong about humanity’s near extinction Video
colab.newscientist.com
ResearchUK-Spanish partnerships are solving pharma’s toughest challengesCoLab with UK Government
Student & graduate
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Nature
01/05/2026 09:50:13 AM
Explore articles by subject
All life runs on 20 amino acids. These cells run key machinery on just 19 AI-guided redesign of protein alphabet in bacteria could unlock new ways to build synthetic organisms.
‘Make Pluto a planet again’? NASA chief revives debate that divides astronomers news | 30 Apr 2026
Long-lived immune cells show promise against cancer in world-first trial news | 30 Apr 2026
Saving sharks and rays, one catch at a time — in photos where i work | 30 Apr 2026
Do octopus brains work like humans’ — or is there another way to be smart? news feature | 29 Apr 2026
Why both trees and technology are important in the race to mitigate carbon emissions Gabrielle Walker world view | 28 Apr 2026
#ScientistAtWork 2026: Nature seeks striking photographs that capture researchers at work Competition winners receive a cash prize and will see their images featured in Nature.
This organoid can menstruate — and shows how tissue can repair itself NEWS | 01 MAY 2026
Why cows burp methane: new ‘cellular organ’ discovered in gut microbes NEWS | 30 APR 2026
Scientists to return to Fukushima — this time to study disaster recovery NEWS | 30 APR 2026
Why you should ‘feed a cold’: eating primes immune cells for action NEWS | 29 APR 2026
Cephalopods deserve higher welfare standards in research These highly sentient creatures have weak protections for their well-being. That must change. editorial
Could agentic AI topple grant-funding systems? comment
We need to talk about failure in science editorial
We need to talk about failure in science Editorial
Cephalopods deserve higher welfare standards in research Editorial
Key US science panels are being axed — and others are becoming less open News Feature
Super-potent opioids could be safer-than-expected alternatives to conventional painkillers News & Views
Efficiency-optimized relativistic plasma harmonics for extreme fields Article
Training language models to be warm can reduce accuracy and increase sycophancy Article
Engineered blood clots stop bleeding in seconds Red blood cells have been modified to form strong clots that halt any bleeding almost instantly and then promote tissue regeneration.
Delivering an immune therapy into tumours instead of intravenously reduces adverse effects clinical briefings
Higher racial diversity in US business and law schools is linked to higher graduate salaries policy brief
Competition between separated parental genomes in fertilized eggs aids development research briefings
A cell atlas charts the immune architecture of diabetic kidney disease research briefings
#ScientistAtWork 2026: Nature seeks striking photographs that capture researchers at work Competition winners receive a cash prize and will see their images featured in Nature. career news
Don’t let your students use AI as a ghostwriter How a research proposal generated by artificial intelligence transformed my approach to teaching and supervision.
14 things our PhD supervisors got right and why it mattered PhD students reflect on how their supervisors made a meaningful difference — from quiet acts of kindness to career-shaping guidance.
How sewing can set you up for failure and success in science nature careers podcast
Hit a glitch in your research? Some ‘night science’ thinking could move it forward nature careers podcast
Why cosmology is more than a theory A philosophical take on the history of the Universe that is inspiring but incomplete. book review
What does the future hold for the thawing Arctic? Two experts unpack how trends in climate and geopolitics might unfold to shape the far north.
The ‘crazy rule-defying’ genes that determine sex A gripping account reveals the workings of the remarkable chromosomes that specify male or female development.
In the flesh futures
From bats at dusk to asteroid quests: Books in brief book review