Skyler Ware

Skyler Ware

AAAS Mass Media Fellow, Summer 2023

Skyler Ware was the 2023 AAAS Mass Media Fellow with Science News. She has a Ph.D. in chemistry from Caltech, where she studied chemical reactions that use or create electricity. Her writing has appeared in ZME Science and the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing’s New Horizons Newsroom, among other outlets.

All Stories by Skyler Ware

  1. Materials Science

    Starchy nanofibers shatter the record for world’s thinnest pasta

    The fibers, made from white flour and formic acid, average just 372 nanometers in diameter and might find use in biodegradable bandages.

  2. Health & Medicine

    Limiting sugar in infancy reduces the risk of diabetes and hypertension

    Children who experienced sugar rationing during World War II were less likely to develop some chronic illnesses as adults than those with no rationing.

  3. Earth

    Reactive dust from Great Salt Lake may have health consequences

    When inhaled, metals left by the shrinking lake could cause inflammation. Experts say more studies are needed to understand the impact.

  4. Physics

    The world’s fastest microscope makes its debut

    Using a laser and an electron beam, the microscope can snap images of moving electrons every 625 quintillionths of a second.

  5. Chemistry

    Old books can have unsafe levels of chromium, but readers’ risk is low

    An analysis of a university collection found that the vibrant pigments coating some Victorian-era tomes exceed exposure limits for the heavy metal.

  6. Chemistry

    Tycho Brahe dabbled in alchemy. Broken glassware is revealing his recipes

    The shards contain nine metals that the famous astronomer may have used, including one not formally identified until 180 years after his death.

  7. Math

    This intricate maze connects the dots on quasicrystal surfaces

    The winding loop touches every point without crossing itself and could help make a unique class of atomic structures more efficient catalysts, scientists say.

  8. Animals

    Tiny saunas help frogs fight off chytrid fungus

    Balmy shelters could bolster resistance to the deadly fungus in amphibian populations, but experts caution they won’t work for all susceptible species.

  9. Materials Science

    Scientists developed a sheet of gold that’s just one atom thick

    Ultrathin goldene sheets could reduce the amount of gold needed for electronics and certain chemical reactions.

  10. Humans

    These are the chemicals that give teens pungent body odor

    Steroids and high levels of carboxylic acids in teenagers’ body odor give off a mix of pleasant and acrid scents.

  11. Earth

    How thunderstorms can spawn damaging ‘downbursts’

    Powerful winds called downbursts are not the same as a tornado, but the damage they cause can be similar — and can hit with little warning.

  12. Chemistry

    Magnetic ‘rusty’ nanoparticles pull estrogen out of water

    Iron oxide particles adorned with “sticky” molecules trap estrogen in water, possibly limiting the hormone’s harmful effects on aquatic life.