All Stories

  1. Planetary Science

    An asteroid could hit the moon in 2032, scattering debris toward Earth

    Researchers are keeping an eye on the building-sized asteroid 2024 YR4, which has a 4 percent chance of hitting the moon seven years from now.

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  2. Health & Medicine

    He made beer that’s also a vaccine. Now controversy is brewing

    An NIH scientist’s maverick approach reveals legal, ethical, moral, scientific and social challenges to developing potentially life-saving vaccines.

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  3. Breaking Ground Crossword

    Solve the crossword from our January 2026 issue, in which we take a crack at geological principles

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  4. Astronomy

    New Hubble images may solve the case of a disappearing exoplanet

    A massive collision between two asteroid-sized bodies around a nearby star offers a rare look at the violent process of planetary construction.

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  5. Health & Medicine

    This newfound cascade of events may explain some female gut pain

    Gut problems like irritable bowel syndrome are often worse in women. A mouse study reveals a pain pathway involving estrogen, gut cells and bacteria.

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  6. Psychology

    As gambling addiction spreads, one scientist’s work reveals timely insights

    Psychiatrist Robert Custer spent his life convincing doctors that compulsive gambling was not an impulse control problem. Today, his research is foundational for diagnosis and treatment.

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  7. Astronomy

    A new hunt for an Earth analog begins

    The Terra Hunting Experiment will track the wobbles of dozens of stars nightly for years in the most focused hunt yet for an Earth twin.

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  8. Health & Medicine

    Polar plunges aren’t just for the daring

    Bragging rights and an adrenaline rush aren’t the only reasons to start the year with a frigid swim. A dip in icy water builds resilience.

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  9. Microbes

    This giant microbe organizes its DNA in a surprising way

    3-D microscopy shows that the giant bacterium Thiovulum imperiosus squeezes its DNA into peripheral pouches, not a central mass like typical bacteria.

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  10. Artificial Intelligence

    A quantum trick helps trim bloated AI models

    Machine learning techniques that make use of tensor networks could manipulate data more efficiently and help open the black box of AI models.

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  11. Animals

    Ancient DNA rewrites the tale of when and how cats left Africa

    Cats were domesticated in North Africa, but spread to Europe only about 2,000 years ago. Earlier reports of “house” cats were wild cats.

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  12. Physics

    How to levitate objects sans magic

    It’s possible to defy gravity using sound waves, magnets or electricity, but today’s methods can’t hoist heavy items high in the sky.

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