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  1. Planetary Science

    How did Pluto capture its largest moon, Charon?

    Planetary scientist Adeene Denton runs computer simulations to investigate Pluto, the moons of Saturn and other icy bodies in the solar system.

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  2. Physics

    There’s math behind this maddening golf mishap

    Math and physics explain the anguish of a golf ball that zings around the rim of the hole instead of falling in.

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  3. Astronomy

    See the largest, most detailed radio image of the Milky Way yet

    Supernova remnants, stellar nurseries and more populate the new edge-on view of the Milky Way as seen from Earth’s southern hemisphere.

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  4. Artificial Intelligence

    As teens in crisis turn to AI chatbots, simulated chats highlight risks

    From blaming the victim to replying "I have no interest in your life" to suicidal thoughts, AI chatbots can respond unethically when used for therapy.

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  5. Animals

    Mosquitoes infiltrated Iceland. Will they survive the winter?

    Mosquitoes have reached Iceland, a place once thought too harsh for them to survive. Climate change may play a role in this shift.

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  6. Health & Medicine

    Volunteers agreed to be buried face-down in the snow, for science

    A safety device helped maintain a buried person’s oxygen levels for up to 35 minutes, tests show, buying crucial time for an avalanche rescue.

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  7. Chemistry

    A new AI technique may aid violent crime forensics

    An AI tool trained on chemical signatures from corpse-eating insects may help determine time and place of death for victims of violent crimes.

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  8. Health & Medicine

    Cancer treatments may get a boost from mRNA COVID vaccines

    Cancer patients who got an mRNA COVID vaccine within a few months of their immunotherapy lived longer than those who did not, health records show.

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  9. Paleontology

    Nanotyrannus was not a teenaged T. rex

    A new Nanotyrannus fossil suggests the diminutive dino lived alongside T. rex in the late Cretaceous Period.

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  10. Plants

    This flower smells like injured ants — and flies can’t resist it

    A type of Japanese dogsbane releases a scent identical to wounded ants’ distress signal, drawing in scavenging flies that unwittingly pollinate it.

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  11. Astronomy

    Some planets might home brew their own water

    Tests on olivine hint that water-rich exoplanets could generate H2O internally, possibly explaining ocean worlds and even some of Earth’s early water.

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  12. Space

    Black holes are encircled by thin rings of light. This physicist wants to see one

    Theoretical physicist Alex Lupsasca is pushing for a space telescope to glimpse the thin ring of light that is thought to surround every black hole.

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