Most mathematicians have been reluctant to start working with artificial intelligence, but a new tool developed by ...
Challenge your brain by solving New Scientist's weekly crosswords on your mobile, tablet or desktop ...
A supercomputer simulation of iron and carbon atoms in Earth’s inner core may explain how a molten ball at the centre of our ...
Leading researchers warn that relying on "passive" carbon sinks such as forests to absorb ongoing carbon emissions will doom ...
Changes to the structure of DNA within fat cells may be why it is often so hard to keep weight off after you have lost it ...
A study modelling the impact of melting ice suggests scientists have underestimated the risk that an important ocean current ...
The oral microbiome is increasingly being linked to head and neck cancer, but we don't yet understand its exact role ...
The world has more ways than ever to spot the invisible methane emissions responsible for a third of global warming so far. But according to a report released at the COP29 climate summit, methane ...
When we are focusing on one task, we often fail to notice something obvious in our field of view. This phenomenon, known as inattentional blindness, was famously demonstrated in a study involving ...
Palaeontologists have pieced together the brain structure of a bird that lived 80 million years ago named Navaornis hestiae, ...
The mega-coral measures 34 metres by 32 metres – making it larger than a blue whale – and it is thought to be three centuries ...
It has been 50 years since archaeologists discovered Lucy, perhaps the most famous ancient hominin ever found. But the ...