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Phys.org / International study shows impact of social media on young people
The use of social media is contributing to declining attention spans, emotional volatility, and compulsive behaviors among young people, according to a new report by Nanyang Technological University, Singapore (NTU Singapore) ...

Phys.org / Subaru telescope discovers 'fossil' in outer solar system
The Subaru Telescope has made an exciting discovery: a small body beyond Pluto, with implications for the formation, evolution, and current structure of the outer solar system.

Phys.org / Flying with hands: The evolution of bat wings
The dream of flying has always fascinated humanity. In evolutionary history, the ability to fly has emerged independently only three times: in birds, pterosaurs, and, uniquely among mammals, in bats.

Medical Xpress / Long-term obesity linked to expression of aging biomarkers
Long-term obesity is associated with the expression of biomarkers denoting antagonistic and integrative aging hallmarks in adults aged 28 to 31 years, according to a study published online July 11 in JAMA Network Open.

Phys.org / Ecologists fight to restore Midwest biodiversity, starting with comprehensive plant species database
Imagine a prairie. How many plant species do you see? Maybe you're picturing yellow coneflowers, some little bluestem, perhaps a few asters. But plant ecologists at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign say these ecosystems ...

Phys.org / Uranium-based catalyst turns air nitrogen into ammonia
Ammonia (NH3) is vital for agriculture, as it is the basis for fertilizers that are needed to feed the world's population. Currently, ammonia is mostly produced by the Haber-Bosch process, which turns nitrogen gas (N2) from ...

Medical Xpress / Eight babies born after mitochondrial donation treatment to reduce transmission of mitochondrial DNA disease
The UK's pioneering licensed IVF technique to reduce the risk of mitochondrial diseases carried out in Newcastle has seen eight babies born, research shows.

Tech Xplore / AI could make these common jobs more productive without sacrificing quality
A study of Chile's workforce finds that AI could "accelerate" nearly half of the tasks performed by the country's 100 most common jobs.

Phys.org / What has Webb taught us about rocky exoplanets so far?
The hunt for potentially habitable rocky planets in our galaxy has been the holy grail of exoplanet studies for decades. While the discovery of more than 5,900 exoplanets in more than 4,400 planetary systems has been a remarkable ...

Medical Xpress / AI and advanced data metrics are forging a new era in cancer research
A new project by a team of researchers across the nation analyzes the ways in which digitized health data, artificial intelligence models and other recent technological advancements have changed how cancers are diagnosed, ...

Phys.org / Electrochemical route allows for synthesis of giant fullerenes at lower cost, less environmental impact
A study conducted by researchers at the University of São Paulo (USP) in Brazil and the Università degli Studi di Roma "La Sapienza" in Italy has synthesized fullerenes and hollow spherical graphene particles using only ...

Phys.org / Study suggests liquid brines could form on Mars' surface during seasonal frost melting
Due to extreme temperatures and the dryness of Mars, it's thought to be impossible for liquid water to form on the planet's surface, a critical precondition for habitability. The only hope of finding liquid water appears ...