
Bevy of Mysterious Fast Radio Bursts Spotted by Canadian Telescope
Bounty includes second known example of a repeating burst
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Bevy of Mysterious Fast Radio Bursts Spotted by Canadian Telescope
Bounty includes second known example of a repeating burst

Cosmic Collision Created "Snowman" MU69—the Farthest World Ever Explored
Close-up images from NASA’s New Horizons probe show the space rock has two distinct lobes

Donald Trump Finally Has a White House Science Adviser
Senate confirms meteorologist Kelvin Droegemeier to lead the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy

These Dusty Young Stars Are Changing the Rules of Planet-Building
Astronomers peer inside planetary nurseries for clues about how our solar system and others came to be

First Hint of Near-Room-Temperature Superconductor Tantalizes Physicists
High-pressure hydrogen materials could be a step toward a new era of superconductivity

Gravitational-Wave Astronomers Detect Hints of Largest Black-Hole Merger Yet
Physicists at the LIGO experiment have now detected 11 cosmic events that produce ripples in the fabric of space-time

The Silent Epidemic Killing More People Than HIV, Malaria or TB
Viral hepatitis is on the rise. Tackling hepatitis B in Africa is key to fighting back

Huge Brain Study Uncovers “Buried” Genetic Networks Linked to Mental Illness
Enormous genomic analysis yields tantalizing insights into mechanisms behind conditions such as schizophrenia and bipolar disorder

Satellite Spies Methane Bubbling up from Arctic Permafrost
Radar instrument aboard a Japanese probe can spot signs of gas seeping from lakes that form as the ground thaws

How the Brain’s Face Code Might Unlock the Mysteries of Perception
Doris Tsao mastered facial recognition in the brain. Now she’s looking to determine the neural code for everything we see

5 Years of Record Warmth Intensify Arctic's Transformation
Sea ice is the thinnest it's been at any time in the last 30 years, and wild reindeer and caribou populations continue to decline

Baby Gene Edits Could Affect a Range of Traits
The gene targeted for its role in HIV is linked to increased severity of other infectious diseases—and has implications for learning in mice

Geologists Measure Bullet Damage to Ancient Middle Eastern Settlements
The ultimate goal is to inform efforts to conserve or repair heritage sites

China Set to Launch First-Ever Spacecraft to the Farside of the Moon
Chang’e 4 mission will test plant growth on the moon, and listen for radio emissions normally blocked by Earth’s atmosphere

First CRISPR Babies: 6 Questions That Remain
Startling human-genome editing claim leaves many open questions, from He Jiankui's next move to the future of the field

Venice Anti-Flood Gates Could Wreck Lagoon Ecosystem
Instead, researchers suggest injecting fluid cement or water below ground to lift the entire city

Asteroid-Sampling Mission Zeroes in on Tiny Space Rock
U.S. spacecraft aims to return the largest trove of space dirt to Earth since NASA’s final Apollo mission in the 1970s

Inside the Plans for Chinese Mega-Collider That Will Dwarf the LHC
Physicist Wang Yifang, the mastermind behind the project, gives Nature an update on the ambitious project

The Hunt for Sky’s “Detergent” Begins in Antarctica
Ice records pre-industrial levels of a chemical that scrubs the atmosphere of greenhouses gases

Reprogrammed Stem Cells Implanted into Patient with Parkinson’s Disease
A man in his 50s is the first of seven patients to receive the experimental therapy

South Africa’s Invasive Species Guzzle Water and Hurt the Economy
The country’s pioneering first report on its biological invaders paints a dire picture for resources and biodiversity

Holy Cow! Astronomers Agog at Mysterious New Supernova
An event known as "Cow" that has rocked astronomy since June likely offers a close look at the birth of a neutron star or black hole

Happy, with a 20 Percent Chance of Sadness
Researchers are developing wristbands and apps to predict moods—but the technology has pitfalls as well as promise

Australian Academics Fear Political Interference Following Vetoed Projects
A minister’s decision to quietly cancel projects selected by funders could damage the country’s academic reputation, warn researchers