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The Vela satellites were built to catch secret nuclear tests, but they accidentally recorded flashes from deep space that opened a new branch of astrophysics

The Vela satellites were built to catch secret nuclear tests, but they accidentally recorded flashes from deep space that opened a new branch of astrophysics

The U.S. military's nuclear detection satellites started catching mysterious gamma-ray flashes in 1967 that did not match any known weapon signature. ...

Agilent and Singapore’s NATi Partner to Advance Lipid-Conjugated Oligonucleotide Research

Agilent and Singapore’s NATi Partner to Advance Lipid-Conjugated Oligonucleotide Research

Collaboration expands research of new delivery platform beyond liver tissues supporting potential preclinical development and strengthens Singapore’...

Form PRE 14A Iovance Biotherapeutics Inc For: 19 May

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Kedron Brook tops the microplastics count – three Brisbane creeks study

Kedron Brook tops the microplastics count – three Brisbane creeks study

A QUT study of microplastics in the sediment of three Brisbane creeks has found that Kedron Brook had the highest load of plastic microparticles...

More than a miss: Scientists identify a gene variant that causes early pregnancy loss

More than a miss: Scientists identify a gene variant that causes early pregnancy loss

Overview New research has identified a genetic variant linked to early pregnancy loss in thoroughbred horses, offering fresh insight into reproductive...

For decades, Australian institutions have displayed stolen human remains. But there's a way forward

Share article Print article The RA Rodda Pathology Museum at the University of Tasmania, established in 1966, is currently in possession of about 2,70...

The bacteria living in and on your body outnumber your own cells, which means that by strict cellular count you are not majority human — and the ratio shifts noticeably depending on whether you’ve just been to the bathroom

The bacteria living in and on your body outnumber your own cells, which means that by strict cellular count you are not majority human — and the ratio shifts noticeably depending on whether you’ve just been to the bathroom

By raw cell count, the human body is a minority partner in its own biology — and the precise composition of that partnership depends, in part, on ho...

Antengene Appoints Dr. Bing Hou as Chief Scientific Officer to Lead Innovation-Driven R&D Strategy and Advance Next-Generation Pipeline | AAP

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AI-driven framework enables precise prediction of RNA splicing and isoform usage

RNA is the means of translating the genetic code embedded in DNA into proteins, which serve as enzymes, transporters, signaling molecules, receptors, ...

Irrigation Expo today

Irrigation Expo today

The Gippsland Irrigation Expo will return to Sale today, bringing together the latest irrigation technologies, research, suppliers and industry expert...

NASA’s Perseverance rover is about to finish its first marathon on Mars, and it’s taken the six-wheeled robot more than five years to do it

NASA’s Perseverance rover is about to finish its first marathon on Mars, and it’s taken the six-wheeled robot more than five years to do it

NASA’s Perseverance rover has driven close to 42 kilometres on the surface of Mars. The marathon distance, officially measured at 42.195 kilometres,...

Ancient Roman Technique Discovered 8,000 Years Earlier, Study Says

Ancient Roman Technique Discovered 8,000 Years Earlier, Study Says

"A technology lost to history." ScienceAlert stories are written, fact-checked, and edited by humans, never generated by AI. Don't miss a story, subsc...

A Spacecraft Powered by Nuclear Heat Could Send Humans to Saturn in Just 220 Days, Bringing Titan Closer Than Ever

A Spacecraft Powered by Nuclear Heat Could Send Humans to Saturn in Just 220 Days, Bringing Titan Closer Than Ever

The engine works. The crew would arrive blind, with bones too brittle to stand. NASA's own data warns this mission could break every limit....

(VIDEO) SpaceX Dragon Successfully Docks with ISS in Latest NASA Cargo Resupply Mission - International Business Times Australia

(VIDEO) SpaceX Dragon Successfully Docks with ISS in Latest NASA Cargo Resupply Mission International Business Times Australia NASA, SpaceX launch Dra...

Pint of Science Festival: Brains meet beers in Cairns

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The James Webb Space Telescope is currently observing galaxies that formed 13 billion years ago, and several of them shouldn’t exist according to the model cosmologists were using when Webb launched

The James Webb Space Telescope is currently observing galaxies that formed 13 billion years ago, and several of them shouldn’t exist according to the model cosmologists were using when Webb launched

JWST was launched to test a cosmological model, and within its first two years of operation, it began returning observations that the model in its sta...

A hidden layer of microbial life has been found beneath the Atacama Desert, and it may be the closest Earth can get to rehearsing the search for life on Mars

A hidden layer of microbial life has been found beneath the Atacama Desert, and it may be the closest Earth can get to rehearsing the search for life on Mars

A new study finds the driest desert on Earth harbors microbial communities so resilient that astrobiologists treat its soil as the working benchmark f...

The warmth of the sun on your skin began its journey up to 100,000 years ago — bouncing through the solar interior for almost all of that time before the final 8-minute sprint to Earth, meaning the energy reaching you now started moving when humans were still living in caves.

The warmth of the sun on your skin began its journey up to 100,000 years ago — bouncing through the solar interior for almost all of that time before the final 8-minute sprint to Earth, meaning the energy reaching you now started moving when humans were still living in caves.

The warmth of the sun on your face this morning began somewhere deep in the solar interior, where the energy producing it spent an estimated tens of t...

The International Space Station is travelling at 17,500 mph as you read this, and the astronauts inside it are aging measurably slower than you are

The International Space Station is travelling at 17,500 mph as you read this, and the astronauts inside it are aging measurably slower than you are

The numbers are real, the effect is measurable, and the gap between an astronaut's clock and yours has been verified to within picoseconds — but the...

The cells in your eyes that detect light are technically part of your brain, pushed outward during embryonic development, which means when you look at the night sky your brain is physically touching the photons that left distant stars thousands of years ago.

The cells in your eyes that detect light are technically part of your brain, pushed outward during embryonic development, which means when you look at the night sky your brain is physically touching the photons that left distant stars thousands of years ago.

Photoreceptors in the human retina are central nervous system neurons that grew outward from the forebrain during the fourth week of embryonic develop...