Science
What does it mean to “look” at a black hole?
General relativity teaches us that observing a black hole is all a question of perspective – and technique, says Chanda Prescod-Weinstein
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How 'quantum software developer' became a job that actually exists
While quantum computers are still in their infancy, more and more people are training to become quantum software developers
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The first brown dwarf ever found was the strangest – now we know why
The first “failed star” ever discovered has been a weird outlier since it was found nearly 30 years ago. New observations show that it is unusually massive because it isn’t a single star after all
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Human OX40L–CAR-Tregs target activated antigen-presenting cells and control T cell alloreactivity | Science Translational Medicine
Human FOXP3 promoter–driven OX40L–CAR-Tregs potently suppress alloreactivity and control graft-versus-host disease.
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Intraoperative evaluation of tumor margins using a TROP2 near-infrared imaging probe to enable human breast-conserving surgery | Science Translational Medicine
Nuclide and optical probes targeting TROP2 support the identification of margins during breast-conserving surgery in patients with breast cancer.
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High-fidelity PAMless base editing of hematopoietic stem cells to treat chronic granulomatous disease | Science Translational Medicine
Versatile PAMless CRISPR base editors enable efficient and precise therapeutic correction of CGD mutations in hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells.
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Melatonin receptor 1A variants as genetic cause of idiopathic osteoporosis | Science Translational Medicine
MTNR1A loss-of-function variant rs374152717 impairs bone turnover and provides evidence of a genetic etiology of idiopathic osteoporosis.
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Follistatin drives neuropathic pain in mice through IGF1R signaling in nociceptive neurons | Science Translational Medicine
After nerve injury, follistatin is up-regulated and interacts with IGF1R to activate Nav1.7 in nociceptive neurons, leading to neuropathic pain.
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6G phone networks could be 9000 times faster than 5G
Next-generation phone networks could dramatically outperform current ones thanks to a new technique for transmitting multiple streams of data over a wide range of frequencies
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First breathtaking images from Euclid telescope's map of the universe
The Euclid space telescope's massive “cosmic atlas” promises to shed light on fundamental questions in physics and cosmology
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Human scientists are still better than AI ones – for now
A simulator for the process of scientific discovery shows that AI models still fall short of human scientists and engineers in coming up with hypotheses and carrying out experiments on their own
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Meet NEO Surveyor, NASA’s near-Earth asteroid detector
Meet NASA’s NEO Surveyor, the space telescope identifying hazardous asteroids and comets within 48 million kilometres of Earth’s orbit
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Teaching computers a new way to count could make numbers more accurate
A new way to store numbers in computers can dynamically prioritise accuracy or range, depending on need, allowing software to quickly switch between very large and small numbers
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NASA set to launch Europa probe to search for signs of habitability
A 6000-kilogram spacecraft will embark on a six-year journey to Jupiter to explore whether its icy moon Europa has the conditions to support life
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Starship: When will SpaceX's next 'chopstick' test flight go ahead?
SpaceX claims the fifth test flight of its Starship rocket will happen “within days”, but the Federal Aviation Administration has not yet approved the launch
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Elon Musk's Tesla Cybercab is a hollow promise of a robotaxi future
Autonomous taxis are already operating on US streets, while Elon Musk has spent years promising a self-driving car and failing to deliver. The newly announced Tesla Cybercab is unlikely to change that
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Millions of websites could be impacted by UK deal on Chagos Islands
The UK government's decision to return the Chagos Islands to Mauritius surprisingly threatens the extinction of millions of website addresses ending in ".io", and no one is quite sure what will happen next
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Earth may be about to pass through the ion tail of a comet
The ion tail of C/2023 A3 (Tsuchinshan-ATLAS) could appear as a blue streak across the northern hemisphere sky during October, in a rare event thought to happen only every few decades
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Do the 2024 Nobel prizes show that AI is the future of science?
Two of the three science Nobel prizes in 2024 have been won by people working in AI, but does this mean that AI models are now vital for science?
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Now is a great time to see Saturn in all its ringed glory
My first sight of Saturn through a telescope inspired my love of space. Dig out your telescopes or visit your local astronomy club, and you may be lucky enough to spot our sixth planet's stunning thick band of rings, says Leah Crane
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