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Israel's war budget leaves top scientists in limbo

Israeli scientist Ellen Graber has spent years researching ways to save chocolate crops from climate change. But with the government slashing spending to fund the war in Gaza, her project is one of hundreds now hanging in ...

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This 18th-century shell collection, saved from a skip, tells a story of empire, explorers and women's equality
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Saturday Citations: The volcanoes of Mars; Starship launched; 'Try our new menu item,' say Australian researchers
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The rules of invention do not reflect the realities of the inventive process. Here's how to fix it
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News reports that don't report magnitude of scientific findings could mislead the public
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Saturday Citations: New hope for rumbly guts; 'alien' signal turns out to be terrestrial and boring. Plus: A cool video
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Why did more female infants than male infants die in Europe from 1700 to 1950?
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Nobel laureates warn Milei budget cuts 'canceling' scientific research
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Saturday Citations: Will they or won't they? A black hole binary refuses to merge. Plus: Vestigial eyeballs
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Animated maps reveal true level of devastation in Ukraine
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Saturday Citations: The neurology of pair bonding and one small step for robots
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Lab-grown diamonds put natural gems under pressure
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Saturday Citations: Einstein revisited (again); Atlantic geological predictions; how the brain handles echoes
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EU, UK urge scientists to join research program after Brexit concerns
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Saturday Citations: Dark matter, a bug, and the marriageability of baritones
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Decades of research samples destroyed in Sweden cooler failure
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Saturday Citations: A dog regenerates a body part that may surprise you; plus microbes, neurons and climate change
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What inner speech is, and why philosophy is waking up to it
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The Doomsday Clock is still at 90 seconds to midnight. But what does that mean?
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Science sleuths are using technology to find fakery and plagiarism in published research
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Works of poetry, fiction and nonfiction receive $10,000 "Science + Literature" awards

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Astronomy
Radio astronomers bypass disturbing Earth's atmosphere with new calibration technique
Bio & Medicine
Nanotech opens door to future of insulin medication
Space Exploration
Boeing's Starliner finally ready for first crewed mission
Archaeology
How evolving landscapes impacted First Peoples' early migration patterns into Australia
Condensed Matter
When injecting pure spin into chiral materials, direction matters
Optics & Photonics
New quantum sensing scheme could lead to enhanced high-precision nanoscopic techniques
Astronomy
Hungry, hungry white dwarfs: Solving the puzzle of stellar metal pollution
General Physics
The BREAD Collaboration is searching for dark photons using a coaxial dish antenna
Plants & Animals
Lego-pushing bumblebees reveal insect collaboration dynamics
Astronomy
Astronomers inspect population of young stellar objects in open cluster NGC 346
Archaeology
Assyriologist claims to have solved archaeological mystery from 700 BC
Mathematics
New study is first to use statistical physics to corroborate 1940s social balance theory
Archaeology
Call of the conch: Archaeologists suggest Indigenous Americans used sound to organize local communities
Plants & Animals
Male or female? Scientists discover the genetic mechanism that determines sex development in butterflies
Biochemistry
Scientists show how to treat burns with an environmentally friendly plant-based bandage
Plants & Animals
Researchers determine large numbers of wild mountain goats are killed every year by avalanches
Plants & Animals
Stony coral tissue loss disease is shifting the ecological balance of Caribbean reefs
Cell & Microbiology
How E. coli get the power to cause urinary tract infections
Space Exploration
China sends a probe to get samples from the less-explored far side of the moon
Optics & Photonics
Physicists create an optical tweezer array of individual polyatomic molecules for the first time

Best of Last Year: The top Phys.org articles of 2023

It was a good year for research across multiple fields as a team at the University of Ottawa, working with colleagues Danilo Zia and Fabio Sciarrino, from the Sapienza University of Rome, demonstrated a novel technique to ...

Exploring acoustic design for better, quieter prisons

Prisons are typically noisy environments, filled with clanking metal bars and echoing concrete surfaces. This level of constant noise is harmful to both prisoners and staff, but there are few guidelines for designing better, ...