Astronomy

Hubble Captures Breakup of Comet C/2025 K1 (ATLAS)

This Hubble image shows the fragmenting comet C/2025 K1 (ATLAS). Image credit: NASA / ESA / D. Bodewits, Auburn / J. DePasquale, STScI.

The breakup of C/2025 K1 (ATLAS), captured by the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, opens a window into how fragile comet nuclei evolve and collapse. These Hubble images of the fragmenting comet C/2025 K1 (ATLAS) were taken over the course of three consecutive days: November 8, 9, and 10, 2025. Image credit: NASA / ESA / D. Bodewits, Auburn / J. DePasquale, STScI. “Sometimes the best science happens...

Archaeology

Long Before Pottery, Children Shaped Clay to Tell Stories

A butterfly clay bead from the Final Natufian period in Eynan-Mallaha, the Upper Jordan Valley, colored red with ochre and marked with the fingerprints of the child (around 10 years old) who modeled it 12,000 years ago. Image credit: Laurent Davin.

A cache of 142 beads and pendants from five Natufian (15,000 to 11,650 years before the present) sites in Israel reveals that clay was first used not for tools or cooking, but for symbolism and identity, often crafted by children whose fingerprints still mark the objects. The findings suggest that the roots of art, learning and social expression emerged long before agriculture. A butterfly clay bead...

Paleontology

Oviraptors May Have Needed the Sun to Hatch Their Eggs

An artist impression of Huanansaurus ganzhouensis. Image credit: Chuang Zhao.

New experiments indicate bird-like oviraptorid dinosaurs could not fully warm their eggs with body heat alone, instead combining brooding with solar warmth in semi-open nests. An artist impression of Huanansaurus ganzhouensis. Image credit: Chuang Zhao. “We show the difference in oviraptor hatching patterns was induced by the relative position of the incubating adult to the eggs,” said Dr. Tzu-Ruei...

Biology

Fungi Found to Trigger Ice Formation

Mortierellomycetes and Umbelopsidomycetes fungi from freshwater ecosystems in Korea. Image credit: Goh et al., doi: 10.4489/kjm.20230018.

A team of researchers from the United States and Germany has identified fungal proteins that can freeze water at relatively warm subzero temperatures, raising the prospect of safer cloud seeding, improved climate models and new advances in food preservation and medicine. Mortierellomycetes and Umbelopsidomycetes fungi from freshwater ecosystems in Korea. Image credit: Goh et al., doi: 10.4489/kjm.20230018. In...

Physics

Astrophysicists Propose New Method to Measure Hubble Constant

Schematic of the expansion of the Universe from the Big Bang to the present day. Image credit: NASA / EFBrazil.

Astrophysicists from the University of Illinois and the University of Chicago have developed an innovative method to measure the Hubble constant — the rate at which the Universe is expanding — using the subtle background hum of gravitational waves. As gravitational-wave detectors become more sensitive in the coming years, this approach could reshape our understanding of cosmic history...

Genetics

New Research Links Daily Multivitamins to Slower Biological Aging

Li et al. evaluated the two-year effect of daily multivitamin-multimineral supplements and cocoa extract (500 mg cocoa flavanols per day, including 80 mg epicatechin) on five DNA methylation measures of biological aging among 958 participants (482 women and 476 men) in the COSMOS study. Image credit: Ri Butov.

In a randomized clinical trial of older adults, researchers found that taking multivitamins for two years modestly slowed epigenetic markers of aging — equivalent to roughly four months less biological aging compared with a placebo. Li et al. evaluated the two-year effect of daily multivitamin-multimineral supplements and cocoa extract (500 mg cocoa flavanols per day, including 80 mg epicatechin)...

Geology

New Research Uncovers Hidden Complexity beneath Martian Surface

This perspective view from ESA’s Mars Express shows three of Mars’ famously colossal volcanoes (from left to right): Arsia, Pavonis and Ascraeus Mons. Image credit: ESA / DLR / FU Berlin.

New orbital data reveal that the most recently active volcanic systems on Mars weren’t simple one-off blasts into space; instead, long-lived magmatic plumbing beneath Pavonis Mons, one of the Red Planet’s largest volcanoes, reshaped lava flows over time, with distinct eruptive phases and evolving chemical signatures, offering fresh insights into the planet’s inner dynamics and how rocky planets...

Other Sciences

Long Before Pottery, Children Shaped Clay to Tell Stories

A butterfly clay bead from the Final Natufian period in Eynan-Mallaha, the Upper Jordan Valley, colored red with ochre and marked with the fingerprints of the child (around 10 years old) who modeled it 12,000 years ago. Image credit: Laurent Davin.

A cache of 142 beads and pendants from five Natufian (15,000 to 11,650 years before the present) sites in Israel reveals that clay was first used not for tools or cooking, but for symbolism and identity, often crafted by children whose fingerprints still mark the objects. The findings suggest that the roots of art, learning and social expression emerged long before agriculture. A butterfly clay bead...