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Phys.org / Nanoparticles and AI can help researchers detect pollutants in water, soil and blood

Across the U.S., hundreds of sites on land or in lakes and rivers are heavily contaminated with hazardous waste produced by human activity. Many of these places, designated as Superfund sites by the Environmental Protection ...

15 hours ago in Nanotechnology
Medical Xpress / What decades of research reveal about involuntary substance use treatment, and why evidence points elsewhere

Since President Donald Trump issued a July 2025 executive order aimed at "ending crime and disorder on America's streets," national attention has increasingly focused on involuntary treatment as a response to visible homelessness ...

14 hours ago in Addiction
Medical Xpress / Learning to slow down: Cold-water swimming benefits explored in new study

Taking a freezing dip in a lake or the sea is a valued well-being practice in the world's happiest country. In Finland, over 720,000 people (about 1 in every 8) are regular cold-water swimmers, voluntarily plunging into water ...

13 hours ago in Health
Phys.org / The nation is missing millions of voters due to lack of rights for former felons

If you gathered every American with a prison record into one contiguous territory and admitted it to the union, you would create the 12th-largest state. It would be home to at least 7 million to 8 million people and hold ...

14 hours ago in Other Sciences
Phys.org / Gag grouper are overfished in the Gulf: This new tool could help

Anglers along the Gulf Coast have long prized the hard-fighting, mild-tasting gag grouper (Mycteroperca microlepis), but some may have been surprised over the past few years by shortened seasons for this desirable reef fish. ...

15 hours ago in Biology
Phys.org / How long do civilizations last?

It is one of the most famous questions in science, and it was asked, as legend has it, over lunch. Enrico Fermi, the physicist who helped build the first nuclear reactor and whose name graces a unit of length so small it ...

17 hours ago in Astronomy & Space
Phys.org / Why a Swiss population cap baffles experts

That Switzerland is considering tightening its immigration policy was no surprise to demographic and economic experts. After all, that's the trend among European countries, both within and outside the European Union.

16 hours ago in Earth
Tech Xplore / When will the price be right for green hydrogen in New Zealand?

Green hydrogen could help cut New Zealand's industrial emissions, but University of Auckland modeling suggests it's unlikely to make a dent by 2050, with electrification doing most of the heavy lifting. This is mainly due ...

9 hours ago in Business
Medical Xpress / Mitochondria mania: Can supercharging your cells help you live longer?

"Longevity science" is on the come up—and "mitochondria" appears to be its newest mascot. The cell's energy-producing center is the talk of TikTok, wellness clinics and newsletters focused on longevity. Influencers peddle ...

14 hours ago in Health
Phys.org / Would Earth still be habitable without us?

Here's a thought experiment that keeps planetary scientists awake at night. Strip every living thing from our planet, every bacterium, every blade of grass, every creature that has ever drawn breath and ask a simple but profound ...

19 hours ago in Astronomy & Space
Medical Xpress / Free 10‑minute online programs aimed at overcoming depression led to real improvements: New research

A well-designed 10-minute online exercise can spark small reductions in depression. That's the key finding of my team's paper, published in Nature Human Behaviour.

14 hours ago in Psychology & Psychiatry
Medical Xpress / How expectations about artificial sweeteners may affect their taste

Elena Mainetto, from Radboud University, Margaret Westwater, from the University of Oxford, and colleagues at the University of Cambridge explored whether they could change how much people enjoy beverages containing sugar ...

13 hours ago in Health