Asthma Isn’t Caused by Leukotrienes After All — Meet the Pseudo-Leukotrienes
Morning coffee still fogs his thoughts as Robert Salomon leans over a glowing vial in the Case Western Reserve lab and realizes the asthma villains scientists chased... Read more.
Why Artemis II Around the Moon Is NASA’s Real Moon Mission — And the One That Matters Most
Under Kennedy Space Center floodlights, the Artemis II Orion rumbles to life, its four astronauts bracing for a ten-day lunar flyby that could redraw NASA's future.... Read more.
Why a Sun-Like Star Going Dark for Nine Months Proves Planetary Collisions Persist in Mature Star Systems
In the Chilean night, the Sun-like star J0705+0612 dimmed for nine months as a colossal cloud of gas and dust drifted in front of it, likely bound to a hidden companion.... Read more.
Paralysis Breakthrough: Brain Waves Could Move Limbs Again—And It Won’t Require Invasive Implants
In a dim neurorehabilitation lab, a paralyzed patient watches a robotic hand respond to nothing but the movement their brain intends, captured by a cap of EEG sensors.... Read more.
Why the Magnetic Secret Inside Steel Could Slash Steelmaking Energy
Inside a furnace-lit UIUC lab, a magnetic field hums as carbon atoms pause at the edge of an iron lattice.... Read more.
Why Obesity and High Blood Pressure Are Direct Causes of Dementia — A Genetic Twist That Rewrites Prevention
In a frost-lit Copenhagen lab, Ruth Frikke-Schmidt maps genetic variants to brain health, revealing that weight and blood pressure do more than predict dementia... Read more.
Why Age-Related Inflammation Might Be Fueled by a Hidden Immune Loop—and Why That Could Change Everything
In a quiet Minnesota lab, aging macrophages flicker with an unrelenting flame as researchers chase a single protein that won't quit—GDF3.... Read more.
Cancer Evolution Isn’t Chaos: The Hidden Rules That Predict Tumor Change
In a sunlit lab at Moffitt, Noemi Andor stares at a glowing screen where thousands of single-cell snapshots drift into ALFA-K, revealing cancer's choreography rather... Read more.
Two-Dimensional Melting Has a Secret In-Between State—Science Catches the Hexatic Phase On Camera
Under a scanning transmission electron microscope in Vienna, a single layer of silver iodide wedged between graphene sheets hesitates as atoms drift—caught in... Read more.
The Hidden Immune Chain: TL1A, ILC3, and Neutrophils Tipping the Scales in IBD-Driven Colorectal Cancer
Mid-morning at Weill Cornell, a glow from the microscope traces TL1A flipping the gut's immune switch, triggering a bone-marrow rush that could lift colorectal cancer... Read more.