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Phys.org / Webb might detect if supermassive black holes form directly

One of the most perplexing discoveries in modern astronomy has been finding supermassive black holes, some weighing billions of times more than our sun, in galaxies that formed less than 750 million years after the Big Bang. ...

Jun 27, 2025 in Astronomy & Space
Phys.org / Deep-sea mining could harm remote ocean ecosystems

Deep-sea mining in a remote part of the Pacific Ocean could harm ocean life including whales and dolphins, new research shows.

Jun 24, 2025 in Biology
Phys.org / A carbon levy on global shipping promises to slash emissions—what that means for Australia's biggest export

Moving people and things around the world by sea has a big climate impact. The shipping industry produces almost 3% of global greenhouse gas emissions—roughly the same as Germany—largely due to the movement of container ...

Jun 24, 2025 in Earth
Medical Xpress / UK annual cost of dog walkers' hand/wrist injuries estimated to top £23 million

The annual cost of hand and wrist injuries among dog walkers in the UK is estimated to top £23 million, with women and the over 65s most at risk as a result of being pulled along on the dog leash, finds a review of the available ...

Jun 24, 2025 in Health
Tech Xplore / AI is learning to lie, scheme, and threaten its creators

The world's most advanced AI models are exhibiting troubling new behaviors—lying, scheming, and even threatening their creators to achieve their goals.

Jun 29, 2025 in Computer Sciences
Tech Xplore / China's humanoid robots generate more soccer excitement than their human counterparts

While China's men's soccer team hasn't generated much excitement in recent years, humanoid robot teams have won over fans in Beijing based more on the AI technology involved than any athletic prowess shown.

Jun 29, 2025 in Robotics
Phys.org / How night lizards survived the asteroid that ended the dinosaurs

Yale University ecologists reveal a lizard lineage that rode out the dinosaur-killing asteroid event with unexpected evolutionary survival traits. Night lizards (family Xantusiidae) survived the Cretaceous–Paleogene (K-Pg) ...

Jun 28, 2025 in Biology
Phys.org / First hominin fossils recovered from submerged Sundaland

The Sunda Shelf is home to a rich Pleistocene hominin fossil record, including specimens of Homo floresiensis, Homo luzonensis, Homo erectus, and archaic Homo. Much of the Sunda Shelf is submerged. At times during the Pleistocene, ...

Jun 27, 2025 in Other Sciences
Phys.org / Scientists map key enzymes behind locust swarming pheromone production

A team of zoologists, molecular engineers and pest control specialists at the Chinese Academy of Sciences, working with a small team of colleagues from Peking University, has identified some of the enzymes and precursor compounds ...

Jun 27, 2025 in Biology
Phys.org / Japan launches a climate change monitoring satellite on mainstay H2A rocket's last flight

Japan on Sunday successfully launched a climate change monitoring satellite on its mainstay H-2A rocket, which made its final flight before it is replaced by a new flagship model designed to be more cost competitive in the ...

Jun 29, 2025 in Astronomy & Space
Phys.org / Twisted trilayer graphene shows high kinetic inductance

Superconductivity is an advantageous physical phenomenon observed in some materials, which entails an electrical resistance of zero below specific critical temperatures. This phenomenon is known to arise following the formation ...

Jun 27, 2025 in Physics
Phys.org / Fossil fungi trapped in amber reveal ancient origin of parasitic zombie-ants

Chinese Academy of Sciences researchers report that fossilized entomopathogenic fungi from mid-Cretaceous amber reveal some of the oldest direct evidence of parasitic relationships between fungi and insects, suggesting that ...

Jun 27, 2025 in Biology