Unclonable cryptography represents a rapidly developing field that harnesses quantum information to achieve security beyond the reach of classical methods, and it relies on the fundamental principle that quantum states cannot be perfectly…
Category: 7. Science
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Tiny spiders that build giant ‘puppet’ decoys from disembodied prey discovered in Peru and Philippines
Tiny tropical spiders in the Philippines and the Peruvian Amazon build giant, arachnid-like decoys in their webs to scare off predators, new research shows.
The outsize fake spiders are made of silk; plant debris; and dead, disembodied prey. Some…
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What a martian ice age left behind
Science & Exploration 12/11/2025
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0 likesTravelling up from Mars’s equator towards its north pole, we find Coloe Fossae: a set of intriguing scratches within a region marked by deep…
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Coalition S to focus on open access financial sustainability
New strategy to look at publishing infrastructures, with members “determined to accelerate full open access”
Coalition S will focus on the financial sustainability of open access scholarly publishing as part of its new framework for…
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Bright nights, hotter planet? Light pollution may be driving ecosystems to release more carbon
Light pollution is on the rise, increasing by around 2 per cent every year. And artificial light can disrupt the lives of countless creatures, causing migrating birds to lose their way, nocturnal animals to struggle with reproduction and even…
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Researchers uncover natural seepage of oil and gas off Northeast Greenland
A large research study by an international team of scientists led by Christoph Böttner from Aarhus University shows clear evidence of extensive natural hydrocarbon seepage along the Northeast Greenland…
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Brain Excitability Varies With Daily Circadian Rhythms
Our brains do not react in a fixed, mechanical way like electronic circuits. Even if we see the same scene every day on our commute to work, what we feel – and whether it leaves a lasting impression – depends on our internal state at that…
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NASA’s Webb finds life’s building blocks frozen in a galaxy next door
In a finding that could change how scientists understand the spread of life’s ingredients across space, astronomers have detected large organic molecules frozen in ice around a forming star called ST6 in a galaxy beyond the Milky Way.
Using the…
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A Faster Path to Drug Discovery
Swedish chemist Jöns Jacob Berzelius, in a letter to a fellow chemist, first suggested the name ‘proteins’ for a particular class of biological substances, deriving it from the Greek word proteios, meaning ‘primary’ or ‘of first…
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Continental peels fuel ocean volcanoes
A piece of the lowermost continental mantle (the crystalline roots of the continents). This represents the material that the research proposes is removed and swept sideways into the oceanic mantle Credit
Prof Tom Gernon, University…Continue Reading
