All Stories

  1. Health & Medicine

    Science works to demystify hair and help it behave

    Research explores new ways to classify hair — from loose curls to tight coils — along with ways to control it and improve its looks and health.

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  2. Health & Medicine

    Why you shouldn’t just brush off dandruff

    Research points to certain yeast and bacteria as culprits behind some dandruff. Special shampoos or prescription cleansers can help.

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  3. Earth

    It’s electric! Long-sought new field found in Earth’s atmosphere

    This ambipolar electric field is weak. Yet it’s still strong enough to control the evolution of Earth’s upper atmosphere — and maybe life as we know it.

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  4. Plants

    Insect-eating plants digest faster with a fungal friend

    Insects stuck in sundews’ sticky goo break down faster when the plants host an enzyme-making fungus.

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  5. Math

    Math reveals how skateboarders can ramp up their half-pipe power

    To pick up speed, half-pipe skaters pump — move between crouching and standing — as they roll. A new study shows the fastest way to the top.

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  6. Materials Science

    Scientists Say: Quantum dot

    Quantum dots are nanosized specks whose properties are governed by the strange rules of quantum physics.

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  7. Animals

    This spider traps flashy fireflies as bait to catch related prey

    When stuck in an orb weaver spider’s web, male fireflies start to blink more like female fireflies — luring in more males.

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  8. Space

    The moon has new tales to share, some from its secretive far side

    Ongoing observations and new lunar rock samples, including the first from its far side, should point to how both the moon and our Earth evolved.

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  9. Climate

    An ancient log shows how burying wood can fight climate change

    A blanket of clay soil helped the wood hold onto the carbon it had absorbed — for thousands of years.

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  10. Physics

    Let’s learn about entanglement

    Entanglement is a special connection between particles that syncs up their properties — even when the particles are far apart.

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  11. Tech

    This young engineer built an affordable electronic braille reader

    Thermo Fisher JIC finalist Yash Mehta got inspired to make a better braille device after visiting a school for blind students in Old Delhi, India.

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  12. Planets

    Scientists Say: Theia

    Clues about this ancient protoplanet's catastrophic end may have been entombed in Earth's lower mantle for billions of years.

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