Walking Sharks Rewrite The Rules Of Reproduction

New research shows that epaulette sharks, often called “walking sharks,” can produce eggs without increasing their overall energy use.

Data Centers Are Driving a US Gas Boom

Gas projects in the US pipeline explicitly linked to data centers increased by almost 25 times over the past two years, according to new research from Global Energy Monitor.

4 Ways To Start Seeing Your Value In Relationships, By A Psychologist

Convincing others to treat you better won’t make you feel valued in your relationship. Teaching yourself to receive and trust the care that is already available will.

The Doomsday Clock Is Now 85 Seconds to Midnight. Here’s What That Means

Catastrophic risks are increasing, cooperation is declining, and swift action is needed from global leaders to correct course.

The Health Risks Of Winter Storms

In this week’s edition of InnovationRx, In this week’s edition of InnovationRx, we look at the health risks of winter storms, a new Korean weight loss drug billionaire, a biotech using AI for rare diseases, and more.

Beyond Meat’s protein soda might be its last chance and best hope
Beyond Meat’s protein soda might be its last chance and best hope

Beyond Meat just launched a new product that’s even further from meat than ever before: a protein soda. Beyond Immerse is the company’s first product that makes no attempt to replicate meat whatsoever, marking a sharp shift in Beyond’s business model. It might seem like it comes out of left field, but it all clicks […]

Meet The Bird That Can Plan For The Future. Hint: It Uses Tools And Trades For Rewards

Scientists once thought that planning required a primate brain. Experiments with birds are now proving that assumption wrong.

1 Productivity Habit That’s Increasing Your Anxiety, By A Psychologist

Research reveals why the habit of chasing metrics might be making you anxious. Here’s what real productivity actually looks like, according to a psychologist.

Astronomers used AI to find 1,400 ‘anomalous objects’ from Hubble archives
Astronomers used AI to find 1,400 ‘anomalous objects’ from Hubble archives

A pair of astronomers at the European Space Agency (ESA) discovered more than 800 previously undocumented “astrophysical anomalies” hiding in Hubble’s archives. To do so, researchers David O’Ryan and Pablo Gómez trained an AI model to comb through Hubble’s 35-year dataset, hunting for strange objects and flagging them for manual review. It’s “a treasure trove […]

A North Atlantic Right Whale Baby Boom Is On—but the Species Remains at Risk

Researchers have documented the births of nearly two dozen North Atlantic right whale calves this season. It’s an encouraging sign for a species whose population is estimated to be below 400.