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Neuromorphic cameras, which only record data when a pixel's brightness changes, may be advantageous for capturing extremely ...
In this passage from the opening of Circular Motion, the latest read for the New Scientist Book Club, our protagonist boards ...
Alex Foster, the author of the latest read for the New Scientist Book Club, Circular Motion, on imagining a world that is ...
When people were randomised to receive either a placebo or Ozempic, they became biologically younger with the latter drug ...
The discovery that brain ageing may be driven by jammed-up protein factories could lead to better ways to help us stay sharp ...
The US Food and Drug Administration has approved a pill-sized device for treating rheumatoid arthritis, marking the first ...
After an 8.8-magnitude earthquake off the coast of Russia’s Kamchatka peninsula, early tsunami warning systems kicked in and ...
The New Scientist Book Club has just finished reading Adam Roberts's novel Lake of Darkness. Some of us loved it – but some of us weren't so sure about this far-future set slice of hard science fictio ...
The Trump administration is attempting to argue that greenhouses gases don’t endanger people to reverse regulations limiting ...
Several researchers who have been critical of Colossal Biosciences’ plans to revive extinct animals say they have been ...
A stroke of lighting that lasted more than 7 seconds and flashed across 829 kilometres is officially the longest ever ...
The recoded bacterium uses only 57 of the 64 possible genetic codes, freeing up seven to be used for different purposes ...