
NASA’s Artemis III crew includes three NASA astronauts and one European Space Agency astronaut

NASA’s Artemis III crew includes three NASA astronauts and one European Space Agency astronaut

The magnitude 7.8 earthquake that hit the Philippines happened at a subduction zone. Such places are capable of producing the largest earthquakes possible

A mere 12 percent of Americans say they trust the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s recommendations “a great deal”

When asteroids slam into Earth, they can create hydrothermal vent systems

This experimental plane, which reached supersonic speeds yesterday, is designed to travel faster than the speed of sound without creating bothersome sonic booms

To run errands across apps, Apple’s upgraded assistant needs deep access to personal data that the company has walled off for years

A new wave of research links GLP-1 drugs to reduced cancer spread and better survival, and the mechanism may go beyond just weight loss

This earthquake may be among the biggest in the Gulf of Mexico’s history

Weight lifting and other forms of resistance training can increase bone density, lower diabetes risk and boost mental health

An experiment with 2,520 participants backs Richard Feynman’s answer to every diner’s dilemma: do I want to try something new?

Culture is humanity’s secret for world domination. This calculation shows just how powerful it is

Start your morning with today’s Spellements. Create as many words as you can from our daily selection of letters—including one tied to recent science news. Play now.

On Sunday Axiom Space and Prada unveiled the cooling inner garment that NASA’s Artemis astronauts will wear under their space suits on the moon
“As for Euler's formula, using Tau/2 would: (1) possibly feel more natural, since Tau would be associated with a whole circle, so Tau/2 might more easily be associated with the half-circle through which the number 1 rotates. (2) allow you get the first prime number into the formula, in addition to the other iconic things already there.”
— Doug Fay

The maker of Claude wants AI labs, including itself, to prepare for a coordinated slowdown if models begin building their own successors

These eye-catching insects offer a prime opportunity for scientists to dig deep into invasion ecology and evolutionary biology

This marks the first case of the New World screwworm in U.S. livestock since the parasite was eliminated in the country in the 1960s

The long-anticipated “Schedule F” order strips job protections meant to safeguard federal employees from political interference

Smog from wildfires is getting worse across much of the U.S., according to a NASA-funded study

World Cup crowds spark outbreak tracking as AI tensions rise and ancient Rome’s roads get a stunning reboot

In a special report, we explore how computers that exploit the bizarre rules of the quantum realm could change the world.
Elsewhere in the issue: A New Race to the Moon | Lost Roads of the Roman Empire | The Scariest Problem in Math

In a new study, an AI tool identified images of seahorse, shark fin and sea cucumber samples in luggage

Online prediction markets are taking bets on everything from climate change to quantum computing. But researchers question their accuracy

MAVEN was the first successful mission designed to study the atmosphere of Mars. It also became a vital node of NASA’s communications network at the Red Planet

Totality in the Mediterranean with Clara Moskowitz

Like astronauts’ “overview effect,” a dramatic feeling of awe takes hold on extended seafloor stays

NASA ordered its astronauts to take refuge inside a docked SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft and to prepare for potential evacuation of the International Space Station. But the crew returned to normal operations shortly afterward

A group of researchers have proposed rules to prevent artificial intelligence from overpowering humans in math

The FDA’s ongoing review of mifepristone could skip over established science, health experts warn

Planets might exist in the least likely place you’d imagine—around the outskirts of supermassive black holes

Microsoft’s announcement of a new quantum computing breakthrough with its Majorana 2 chip continues a trend of bold claims followed by scant evidence

A new analysis of red lines inside a cave in Wales suggests they were made deliberately by ancient humans some 17,000 years ago

China apparently didn’t issue any airspace or maritime notices ahead of the maiden launch of this rocket on Monday
The Ocean Observatories Initiative has been collecting data on physical, chemical, geological and biological conditions in the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans for the past decade

A physician involved in the long push to change the name PCOS to PMOS takes us behind the scenes of this subtle yet consequential change

It's not clear why the National Science Foundation may be limiting funding to certain U.S. universities

By encoding mathematical statements into numbers, mathematician Kurt Gödel used ordinary arithmetic to check whether a statement can be proved

‘Penguin’ decays from CERN’s latest Large Hadron Collider experiment hint at weird new physics

NASA’s Hubble captures gorgeous new photo of a spiral galaxy as it wanders through the Virgo Cluster
Messier 88 is an active galaxy with a central supermassive black hole that is gobbling up gas and dust

A deadly Ebola outbreak is spreading fast—and U.S. cuts to foreign aid are making it worse

The new open-source atlas, generated by an AI tool called ESMFold2, vastly increases the known protein universe

Deep surveys of the sky have turned up galaxies vastly larger than our own. Are there even bigger ones yet to be seen?