
The breakthrough could reveal previously hidden ancient human activity inside caves, acting as ‘genetic archives’

The breakthrough could reveal previously hidden ancient human activity inside caves, acting as ‘genetic archives’

Poor preparation and a failure to properly apply the coating may be just a few of the reasons why the Reflecting Pool’s new paint job appears to be peeling off

Chat apps, email, and cloud files have become the primary record of how power is exercised. Archivists are trying to preserve them before formats go dark or messages disappear without a trace

A new model flags people at high risk of sudden cardiac death from a routine ECG—and reveals a warning sign in the heart’s electrical activity

A new study claims that the universe isn’t entirely the same no matter where you look—a radical proposal

This new group, which is led by Harvard professor Avi Loeb, aims to advise the Trump administration and the U.S. intelligence community, as well as to publish its findings in peer-reviewed journals

Pigeons seem to defy a century-old psychology law about how rewards and consequences help us learn

Training people to pay attention to the right visual cues nearly doubled how accurately they could spot AI-generated faces

Some creative calculations using bug traps, epidemiology and trees suggest there are some 20 million unique insect species on Earth

How Emmy Noether's theorem uses the Lagrangian to provide a formula for calculating the quantity of symmetries in a system—like the orbit of planets.

Famed AI wins in Go let human players rethink their moves in a whole new way

Solve the grid in our daily expert Sudoku puzzle

This brilliant new image, taken by Europe’s Euclid space telescope, offers a preview of the kind of imaging that will be possible with NASA’s upcoming Roman telescope

This Silicon Valley-backed venture is unraveling the mangled remains of scrolls ruined by the 79 C.E. eruption of Vesuvius that destroyed Herculaneum and Pompeii

Astronomers have for the first time observed an atmosphere around a giant planet orbiting a white dwarf

After decades of debate, the scientific case is clear for Europe’s Future Circular Collider, a colossal successor to the Large Hadron Collider. But transforming this megaproject from vision to reality is far from guaranteed
“I am part of a group that gets together weekly for emotional support. Several of the people (all adults) are struggling with online social/media addiction although it is not a social media addiction group. So this is real not just for children but adults as well. The sites have a motivation to create that attachment, and their tools are endless…”
— Gabor

Billions of emerging insects will likely trigger predator population surges—but some species mysteriously opt out of such bounties

The bionic bugs could be called up for aquatic search and rescue missions, according to the researchers

A new decision rules that geofence warrants are Fourth Amendment searches, but it stops short of banning police access to revealing location histories

A prolonged, intense heat wave will make temperatures feel as hot as 115 degrees Fahrenheit in the eastern U.S. this week

A new quantum computer sets a high watermark for accuracy. Are we on the verge of a big breakthrough?

The toxin behind two outbreaks in seven months is hard to find—and just a handful of labs are equipped to look for it at all

Presenting our inaugural class of Young American Scientists: 28 researchers who are redefining the future of science. For early-career scientists, it's a tumultuous time of funding cuts and general uncertainty. Their dedication and optimism, however, provide plenty of reason for hope.
Elsewhere in the issue: Labs That Run Themselves | How to Fix Science | Craig Venter's Final Interview

The great American brain drain could define science for a generation

Three companies will receive a total of $600 million to executive four moon landings, laying the groundwork for a planned crewed outpost on the surface

Inside the quest to rescue NASA’s aging Swift observatory

Totality in the Mediterranean with Clara Moskowitz

A handful of start-up firms are testing therapies that target specific epigenetic markers to treat everything from high cholesterol to a rare muscular disorder

Temperatures in New York’s Central Park haven’t surpassed 100 degrees Fahrenheit since 2012; but that may be about to change

As Kew Botanic Gardens completes a scan of its collections, AI tools could help in the fight against biodiversity loss

The speedy machine displaces the U.S.’s Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory’s El Capitan at the top of the TOP500 rankings of the world’s fastest supercomputers

Knowing what kind of tick bit you and where you got it can help inform next steps

Noether's work helped prove the conservation of energy in physics, a key foundation for Einstein's theory of relativity

Fathers show changes in some of the same brain areas as mothers, but the effect of parenthood on dads isn’t nearly as well studied

Julie Elie has been studying zebra finch vocalizations for years. Now, she has won the Coller-Dolittle Prize for progress toward a world where humans can talk to animals

Two people were the first to receive the therapy for a condition that damages the spinal cord and optic nerve

The discovery of a completely new type of gravitational wave could reveal what happens near a black hole’s event horizon

This operation opens the door to treating more people living with HIV who have end-stage organ disease

The Trump administration wanted the surface of the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool to be “American flag blue.” A water-treatment expert explains why the pool is still algal green and why the bloom could keep coming back