Medicine & TechnologyResearch shows that high-fructose corn syrup found in sodas, processed foods, and snacks are causing inflammation and possibly reprogramming immune cells.
Researchers analyzed the tusks of 10 narwhals in Northwest Greenland, uncovering the changes in the porpoise's diet and traces of mercury recorded in its tusks that act as an archive from the day it was born.
Eli Lily published detailed reports on the efficacy of Phase 2 clinical trials of donanemab, supporting the controversial amyloid hypothesis. Experts believe it could revolutionize Alzheimer's therapies.
A study published by researchers from Ohio State University suggests that stimulating blood vessels with regulated direct current electric fields could positively affect proteins that hold blood vessel walls hastening blood vessels' growth, making wound healing faster and more efficiently.
Researchers from the Australian National University found a natural protein--Neuritin-- as an effective means of hampering the production of allergy-inducing rogue plasma cells in the body.
Blue Origin and NASA are recreating the moon's orbit on Blue Origin's New Shepard rocket to test payloads and train astronauts set for the lunar mission on Artemis I.
Researchers from the University of Buffalo developed an AI tool that can detect deepfakes based on the light reflection on the image's cornea. Despite the restrictions of the developed technology, researchers are continuing to expand the effectiveness of the tool.
On Thursday, SpaceX successfully launched Falcon 9 booster rockets carrying Starlink satellites, adding to the largest artificial constellation of satellites. Additionally, SpaceX was awarded two national security launches beating out Northrop Grumman and Blue Origin.
Researchers from MIT developed neural networks with AI technology that renders 3D holograms faster and more efficient than the technologies used today.
A two-year multidisciplinary study headed by international researchers and journalists unravels the extent and effect of nuclear fallout on the Polynesian residents from 1966 to 1996.
Popularized by science fiction, scientists develop a physical model that bends the spacetime continuum to allow lightspeed warp travel that can be built with physics principles known to man today.
A meteorite that crash-landed in the Sahara Desert dating back to the early days of the solar system sheds new light on how protoplanets were formed. It also shows the composition of the early celestial bodies before the Earth was formed.