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Is Life Just Different? | Quanta Magazine
In 1993, a team led by the planetary scientist Carl Sagan tentatively concluded that there is life on Earth. Not much of a deduction, you might think — except that the researchers confined their evidence to observations made by the Galileo spacecraft, which had flown past our planet three years earlier on a looping journey…
I built a CUDA-accelerated black hole raytracer for my master’s thesis – would love feedback and collaborators
After a long time of work, I'm making my master's thesis project public: a CUDA-accelerated numerical relativity raytracer for Schwarzschild black holes that compares seven different integration methods, including two novel integrators I derived specifically for this problem. My thesis was inspired by some of the results in the Nasa, Orbits, Flight Book 1963 What…
This $35,000 Computer Is Powered by Trapped Human Brain Cells
Cortical Labs would like to sell you a brain in a box. It’ll cost about $35,000, and you can teach it to do all kinds of nifty things. If that’s out of your price range, you can sign up for its ‘Wetware-as-a-Service’ and rent bio-computer processing power from a rack of living tissues welded to…
2026 Full Moon calendar: When to see the Full Moon and phases
The phenomenon of a Full Moon arises when our planet, Earth, is precisely sandwiched between the Sun and the Moon. This alignment ensures the entire side of the Moon that faces us gleams under sunlight. Thanks to the Moon’s orbit around Earth, the angle of sunlight hitting the lunar surface and being reflected back to…
An unexpected breakthrough: a high school student’s AI uncovers 1.5 million previously invisible cosmic phenomena
An unexpected breakthrough: a high school student’s AI uncovers 1.5 million previously invisible cosmic phenomena – Futura-Sciences June 29, 2026 5 min American high school student stuns scientists by mapping 1.5 million previously unknown space objects / Credit : © Matteo Paz. Credit_ Fox 11 Los Angeles See also
Tropical forests stop absorbing carbon dioxide during El Niño events. This year could be the worst.
Tropical forests draw down and store large quantities of CO₂ from the atmosphere. The Amazon rainforest in South America, for example, stores approximately 123 billion tonnes of carbon — more than is stored in any other terrestrial ecosystem in the world. But these forests are facing a critical challenge. Research from 2023, which was carried…