SCIENCE

Breakthrough in nanostructure technology for real-time color display

A groundbreaking technology that enables the real-time display of colors and shapes through changes in nanostructures has been developed. This

SCIENCE

Study illuminates the protective role of fluorescence in neon-colored sea anemones

For the first time, a team of researchers at Stanford University and UC San Diego’s Scripps Institution of Oceanography has

SCIENCE

Maternal obesity may promote liver cancer

Obesity, which could reach 50% of the population in certain developed countries by 2030, is a major public health concern.

SCIENCE

Delta-8-THC use reported by 11% of 12th graders in 2023

Approximately 11% of 12th-grade students across the United States reported past-year use of delta-8- tetrahydrocannabinol (delta-8-THC, or delta-8 for short),

SCIENCE

Researchers expand our understanding of how the body and brain communicate

Researchers investigating how exactly the brain processes the incoming stream of information from the heart and lungs, discovered that specific

SCIENCE

Pronghorn population declining due to human development

Global species diversity is in decline almost everywhere, largely due to human-driven development and resource use. Typically, conservation efforts have

SCIENCE

Range-shifting fishes are climate-change losers, according to new research

The warming of the Earth’s oceans due to climate change is affecting where the world’s fishes live, eat and spawn

SCIENCE

Higher carnivorous dinosaur biodiversity of famous Kem Kem beds, Morocco

An international team of palaeontologists from The Netherlands, the UK, Argentina, Germany and Belgium applied recently developed methods to measure

SCIENCE

New traffic signal would improve travel time for both pedestrians and vehicles

Adding a fourth light to traffic signals — in addition to red, green and yellow — would shorten wait times

SCIENCE

Scientists propose new theory that explains sand ripples on Mars and on Earth

Sand ripples are fascinating. They are symmetrical, yet wind — which causes them — is very much not. Furthermore, they