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Science & Technology

Explore the fascinating world of science and cutting-edge technology. Discover innovations, scientific discoveries, space exploration, artificial intelligence, and tools shaping the future.

    Science & Technology

    Colossal’s Bold Bet: Revive the Woolly Mammoth by 2028

    This scientific breakthrough was announced by the Texas company Colossal Biosciences, which specializes in biotechnology…

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  • Science & Technology

    When Science Tried to Find Adam and Eve

    Researchers have tried to show that the Garden of Eden sat in Mesopotamia and that humanity descends from a common ancestor. According to the Bible, the first man and woman…

  • Science & Technology

    He Thought It Was Gold — It Was a 4.6-Billion-Year-Old Meteorite

    For years, a man kept a mysterious boulder he discovered in Maryborough Regional Park with a metal detector. David Gould hoped the stone hid a gold nugget. What did the…

  • Science & Technology

    Norway Is Building a Zero-Emission Cruise Ship with Solar Sails

    The 130-year-old Norwegian company Hurtigruten is currently developing what may be the most energy-efficient cruise ship in the world: it will have retractable 50-meter sails covered in solar panels, battery…

  • Science & Technology

    How Extreme Are Temperatures on the Moon

    The Moon’s temperature, like Earth’s, changes depending on whether sunlight is hitting its surface. But the swings are much larger than on our planet. “The temperature wildly fluctuates from extremely…

  • Science & Technology

    The Christmas Dinner of the Future: Seaweed ‘Pigs in Blankets,’ Lab-Grown Turkey, and Pea Cheese

    Picture a Christmas dinner reworked for the near future: seaweed “pigs in blankets,” lab-grown turkey, pea-based cheese, and “super” potatoes. A team at UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) has imagined…

  • Science & Technology

    How Long Does It Really Take to Get to the Moon

    There’s no single answer — lunar missions have shown that travel time to the Moon can vary widely. In 1969 the Apollo 11 astronauts were the first in history to…

  • Science & Technology

    How 3D forensics reconstructed the real face of Saint Nicholas

    Researchers led by designer Cícero Moraes have reconstructed the face of the man who inspired the gift-bringing figure of Christmas. Cícero Moraes is a Brazilian 3D designer known for forensic…

  • Science & Technology

    How Goats and Dogs Might Predict Earthquakes and Volcanic Eruptions

    Researchers from the Max Planck Institute for Animal Behavior (Germany) are registering thousands of farm animals — dogs, goats, and others — as well as numerous wild animals for a…

  • Science & Technology

    Motopia: the 1960s plan to put cars on rooftops and free the streets

    A pedestrian’s dream “There will be neither books nor newspapers, nor theater nor cinema—there will only be television.” Remember the way the protagonist of a well-known Soviet film voiced that…

  • Science & Technology

    Why Most Planes Steer Clear of Tibet

    If you look at the flight paths of aircraft traveling around the world, you’ll notice some interesting patterns. One is that planes don’t always fly in straight lines to their…

  • Science & Technology

    AI Reimagines the Virgin Mary as a Teenager — a New Take on Our Lady of Guadalupe

    The artist used artificial intelligence to create a realistic image of the Virgin Mary, depicting her as a teenage girl with long black hair, dark eyes, and a tan complexion.…

  • Science & Technology

    A Swiss chapel put an AI “Jesus” in the confessional — here’s what happened

    The Chapel of Saint Peter in Lucerne has replaced the priest in the confessional with a digital avatar of Jesus. The installation, titled Deus in Machina, is a project from…

  • Science & Technology

    Austria’s CycloRotor-powered BlackBird promises 360° thrust control and 2025 test flights

    The company plans to complete the demonstration version of BlackBird, with the CycloRotor electric drive system, by the end of this year. The inaugural flights are scheduled for early 2025.…

  • Science & Technology

    Zhurong Rover Finds Traces of an Ancient Ocean Shoreline on Mars

    A team of astronomers at the Hong Kong Polytechnic University reports that about 3.68 billion years ago an ocean likely covered much of Mars’ northern hemisphere. This month on the…

  • Science & Technology

    Millions of Tons of Diamond Dust Could Cool the Planet — Here’s the Catch

    This sounds like a science-fiction blockbuster. But it’s not: real scientists are seriously weighing the idea’s pros and cons. A team of researchers from the Institute of Atmospheric and Climate…

  • Science & Technology

    Elon Musk Reveals a Driverless ‘Robovan’ and a Golden Robotaxi

    As expected, Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk showcased an entire Robotaxi park in Hollywood. He also unexpectedly revealed a second vehicle — an autonomous truck called Robovan. What did…

  • Science & Technology

    Inside Haven-1: What the First Private Commercial Space Station Will Be Like

    As children, many of us dreamed of going into space when we grew up. But life aboard space stations—especially the ISS—isn’t as romantic or glamorous as it seems. That could…

  • Science & Technology

    The Milky Way’s disk is 13 billion years old — older than we thought

    An international team of astronomers led by Dr. Maosheng Xiang from the Chinese Academy of Sciences says the population of stars older than 13 billion years is the primordial disk…

  • Science & Technology

    Elon Musk’s plan to put a million people on Mars could wreck the search for life

    Recently, SpaceX CEO Elon Musk made a striking claim: that in 30 years a million people will be living on Mars. Not all scientists agree. Building a city of that…

  • Science & Technology

    Amazon’s Smart Glasses Will Guide Couriers Through the Last Mile

    Couriers wearing smart glasses are expected to receive step-by-step instructions for an entire route and at each stop. As the company says, the device will guide drivers to buildings and…

  • Science & Technology

    What if Earth captured the Moon? A surprising new take on the Moon’s origin

    Despite the fact that the Moon is Earth’s closest neighbor, scientists have been struggling with the mystery of its origin for centuries. In the 1980s, astronomers suggested that this natural…

  • Science & Technology

    What’s Inside Jupiter — and Why It Has No Solid Surface

    The gas giant Jupiter is the largest planet in the Solar System and the fifth planet from the Sun. But if Jupiter has no surface, what does it have? Let’s…

  • Science & Technology

    Japan Launched the World’s First Wooden Satellite — and It’s Serious Science

    This launch is a preliminary test of using wood for space research. The palm-sized device weighs one kilogram and is intended to inform plans for the Moon and Mars. The…

  • Science & Technology

    DNA Finally Reveals Christopher Columbus’s Hidden Origins

    A team of Spanish scientists led by forensic expert Miguel Lorente analyzed DNA from the remains of Christopher Columbus, which are kept in Seville Cathedral. Scientists also studied the DNA…

  • Science & Technology

    This hypersonic passenger plane could cross the Atlantic in under an hour

    The Texas-based aerospace company Venus Aerospace is one of the few companies captivated by the idea of hypersonic jet travel. Currently, the company’s engineers are developing a passenger airliner called…

  • Science & Technology

    Vietnamese Tinkerer Builds a UFO‑Shaped Jet Boat That Reaches 50 km/h

    Followers tracking the Vietnamese craftsman’s work called the vessel “out of this world.” Recently, Trang Long Ho delighted them with footage showing him build a fully functional jet boat shaped…

  • Science & Technology

    A common food dye can make skin and muscle temporarily transparent

    Researchers at Stanford University say a common food dye — not yet tested in humans — may eventually help detect injuries or tumors. To reach this finding, scientists examined the…

  • Science & Technology

    Turning Coffee Grounds into Concrete to Cut Waste and Save Sand

    Researchers at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT) in Australia have invented a way to tackle several problems at once. Every year, an astonishing 10 billion kilograms of coffee…

  • Science & Technology

    Most AI Chatbots Skew Left, Study Finds

    Chatbots — Artificial intelligence is becoming an increasingly accessible way to get answers and advice. Large language models are being consulted even though they are known for racial and gender…

  • Science & Technology

    The dinosaur-killing asteroid came from beyond Jupiter

    New evidence that the impactor came from beyond Jupiter could help resolve a long-running debate in cosmochemistry. When an asteroid struck the Gulf of Mexico 66 million years ago, Earth…

  • Science & Technology

    Debris From NASA’s DART Impact Could Reach Earth and Mars — When It Might Arrive

    On September 26, 2022, NASA’s DART spacecraft deliberately struck Dimorphos, the small moon of asteroid Didymos, to change its orbit. According to NASA, the DART (Double Asteroid Redirection Test) mission…

  • Science & Technology

    Horoscopes Flunked: Most Astrologers Couldn’t Beat Random Guessing

    One hundred fifty-two astrologers who took part in the experiment led by Spencer Greenberg were correct only about 20 percent of the time and often disagreed with each other. So…

  • Science & Technology

    Mantle Sample from Mid-Atlantic Ridge Reveals Unexpected Magma Pathways — and Clues to Life’s Origins

    This scientific breakthrough allowed the team to uncover a number of secrets hidden within the depths of our planet. Using the research vessel JOIDES Resolution, scientists drilled a 1,268-meter hole…

  • Science & Technology

    Who — or what — are Peru’s ‘alien’ mummies? A U.S. team will take a closer look

    The famous ‘alien’ mummies from Peru will soon be transported to the United States. Congressman Tim Burchett said he would enlist top scientific teams to study the remains, which researchers…

  • Science & Technology

    Why Stainless Steel Doesn’t Rust — and How It Repairs Itself

    Rust is a constant threat to iron, which oxidizes easily in air and water. Even steel—a hard alloy of iron and carbon—rusts easily. However, stainless steel, as its name suggests,…

  • Science & Technology

    Nano-MIND: Magnetic system remotely alters mouse brain activity and behavior

    Researchers at the Korean Institute for Basic Science (IBS) have announced that they have created what they call the world’s first remote-control system for consciousness. It controls the brain remotely…

  • Science & Technology

    Curiosity Cracked a Rock and Revealed Pure Sulfur on Mars

    For the past ten months, the Curiosity rover has been studying Gediz Vallis, a channel that cuts through Mount Sharp, a formation that has intrigued scientists since before Curiosity began…

  • Science & Technology

    What Living on the Moon Will Actually Look Like: 3D‑Printed Homes, Prada Spacesuits, and Lunar Football Fields

    Recently, leading global media reported that a team of researchers from the University of Trento (Italy) discovered a “secret” cave. The cylindrical, 100-meter-deep cavity, as wide as a football field,…

  • Science & Technology

    FlyNow’s eCopter Could Shuttle Visitors Around Expo 2030

    It’s hard to imagine thousands of neat eCopters hovering like a cloud of insects over the futuristic pavilions of Expo 2030, carrying participants and guests to the world’s largest exhibition.…

  • Science & Technology

    South Korean team grows lab beef that actually tastes like steak

    A new breakthrough in food technology: a team of researchers from Yonsei University’s Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering in South Korea has grown artificial beef in the lab. This…

  • Science & Technology

    This wearable system turns astronauts’ urine into drinking water in five minutes

    Astronauts on long missions could make spacewalks easier thanks to a new device. The Stillsuit system, inspired by the device from the sci‑fi film Dune (2000), collects urine, purifies it,…

  • Science & Technology

    Neanderthals Interbred with Modern Humans Starting 250,000 Years Ago

    Neanderthals and modern humans shared a long, fascinating history. The presence of Neanderthal DNA in the genomes of living people shows those populations were closely connected. Some scientists even argue…

  • Science & Technology

    ESA Turns Meteorite Dust into Lego-Style Bricks for Moon Bases

    Researchers at the European Space Agency (ESA) remembered building strange creations with Lego as kids. Inspired by those memories, they developed a new building material for constructing structures on the…

  • Science & Technology

    Miss AI crowns a winner: Moroccan virtual influencer takes $13,000 prize

    HouseWife tracked the key stages of this unique competition and is ready to share the results with its readers. The winner of the AI beauty contest—the Fanvue World AI Creator…

  • Science & Technology

    ‘I looked like a mummy’: the brutal reality of spacesuits on the ISS

    Catherine “Keddy” Coleman is the NASA astronaut who advised Sandra Bullock during filming of Alfonso Cuarón’s 2013 movie Gravity. In her book The Space Between, Coleman—who once served on the…

  • Science & Technology

    From Martian Beavers to Gray Men: How Our Visions of Aliens Changed

    The ancient Greek philosopher Democritus, who wrote extensively about space, assumed that there were habitable worlds within it. And in 1898, H. G. Wells’ “The War of the Worlds”, which…

  • Science & Technology

    A new reconstruction shows what 90-year-old Ramesses II probably looked like

    Earlier, HouseWife reported an Egyptian-British team’s reconstruction of Ramesses II at the height of his power. Now researchers led by Brazilian digital designer and reconstructor Cicero Moraes have revealed what…

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Spring Baking: Young Cabbage Pie with Sour Cream
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