ScienceDaily
Scientists make stunning discovery that could change our understanding of the Universe
New research suggests the Universe's fundamental constants β the physical rules governing all matter β fall within an astonishingly narrow range that makes liquid-based life possible. Shift these constants even slightly, and fluids like blood or water would behave in ways incompatible with living cells. The findings add fresh weight to one of science's deepest questions: why the Universe appears so precisely tuned for life to exist.
Read article βPhys.org
For years, reading struggles seemed obvious. This massive analysis points to a very different cause
A sweeping new analysis is challenging the long-held belief that reading struggles stem from intelligence or visual processing deficits. The research points to a fundamentally different root cause, upending decades of conventional wisdom about why children fall behind. The findings carry significant implications for how educators and clinicians identify and support struggling readers.
Read article βScienceDaily
This strange planet pair shouldnβt exist, but it does
Astronomers have spotted a planetary system 190 light-years away that defies established models of planet formation: a hot Jupiter coexisting with a mini-Neptune orbiting even closer to their host star. Hot Jupiters were long considered solitary giants, their violent formation process thought to eject any neighboring planets. This discovery forces a rethink of how β and where β gas giants actually form.
Read article βScienceDaily
Webb space telescope finds a giant galaxy that doesnβt spin
The James Webb Space Telescope has identified a massive ancient galaxy that defies expectations: formed less than 2 billion years after the Big Bang, it shows no rotation whatsoever. Non-rotating galaxies are typically a hallmark of old, evolved systems that have had billions of years to settle β not young ones still fresh from formation. The discovery forces astronomers to rethink the timeline of galactic evolution and the processes that govern how galaxies mature.
Read article βPhys.org
Ultrasound waves rupture COVID-19 and flu viruses without damaging cells
Researchers at the University of SΓ£o Paulo have found that high-frequency ultrasound waves can destroy SARS-CoV-2 and H1N1 viruses by exploiting acoustic resonance β a process that causes viral particles to structurally deform until they rupture. Critically, the technique leaves human cells unharmed, suggesting a potential path toward non-chemical antiviral treatments. If the findings translate to clinical applications, the technology could represent a significant shift in how viral infections are managed.
Read article βGet this delivered every morning
Join thousands of readers who get the world's most important stories, curated daily.
Start reading free β