• Wissenschaft-aktuell

    Der Gipfel des Gletscherschwunds
    17/12/25 00:00:00
    In den Alpen könnten dieses Jahrhundert nahezu alle bis auf gerade mal 20 Gletscher verschwinden – Höhepunkt des Schwunds bis 2040 erwartet

    Zugreifen mit Schallwellen
    10/12/25 00:00:00
    Neuer Chip kann über filigrane Struktur Schallwellen gezielt manipulieren und zu einem vielseitigen, akustischem Werkzeug verwandeln.

    Warum die Erde unter Santorin bebt
    05/12/25 00:00:00
    Detaillierte Bebenanalyse offenbart eine komplexe Dynamik flüssigen Magmas unter dem hellenischen Inselbogen

  • Spektrum.de RSS-Feed

    Braunbär Bruno: Vom Symbol für Wildnis zum Museumsstück
    14/05/26 15:00:00
    Vor fast 20 Jahren bewegte Braunbär Bruno ganz Deutschland, heute steht er ausgestopft im Museum. Was sein Schicksal über den Umgang mit Wildtieren verrät.

    Radioastronomie: Erstes enges Paar riesiger Schwarzer Löcher entdeckt
    14/05/26 13:00:00
    Beobachtungen mit Radioteleskopen sprechen für die Existenz von zwei massereichen Schwarzen Löchern im Kern des Blazars Markarian 501.

    Die unbequeme Wahrheit über vegane Ernährung
    14/05/26 12:15:00
    Was steckt wirklich hinter unserem Essen? Was ist wirklich schädlicher – Ackerbau oder Tierhaltung?

    Quiz zu Stellenwertsystemen
    14/05/26 11:15:00
    Heutiges Thema: Stellenwertsysteme.

    Ozeane: Weltmeere könnten auf neue Wärmerekorde zusteuern
    14/05/26 11:00:00
    In den Jahren 2023 und 2024 hatte die Oberflächentemperatur der Ozeane Extremwerte erreicht. Aktuell schießen die Werte erneut in die Höhe.

  • Latest Science News -- ScienceDaily

    Who are the Japanese? Huge DNA discovery rewrites history
    14/05/26 07:00:37
    Scientists analyzing the genomes of thousands of people across Japan discovered evidence for a previously overlooked third ancestral group, challenging the long-accepted “dual origins” theory. The newly identified ancestry appears linked to the ancient Emishi people of northeastern Japan. Researchers also uncovered inherited Neanderthal and Denisovan DNA connected to conditions like diabetes, heart disease, and cancer.

    Deadly “red sky” solar storm from 800 years ago discovered in ancient trees
    14/05/26 07:55:09
    Researchers in Japan traced a hidden medieval solar storm using ancient tree rings and centuries-old sky observations. The team linked reports of eerie red auroras with spikes of carbon-14 trapped in buried wood, revealing a powerful solar radiation event around 1200 CE. The findings suggest the Sun was far more active at the time, with unusually short solar cycles.

    Scientists discover the strange way CO2 cools part of Earth’s atmosphere
    14/05/26 09:24:00
    Scientists have finally cracked the mystery behind one of climate change’s strangest fingerprints: while Earth’s surface heats up, the upper atmosphere is rapidly cooling. Researchers at Columbia University discovered that carbon dioxide acts very differently high above the planet, where it actually helps radiate heat into space instead of trapping it. The team found that certain infrared wavelengths fall into a “Goldilocks zone” that becomes increasingly effective as CO2 levels rise, accelerating cooling in the stratosphere.

    Scientists discover hidden math secret inside Chinese money plant leaves
    14/05/26 09:48:09
    Scientists have uncovered a hidden mathematical secret inside the leaves of the Chinese money plant: a naturally occurring geometric pattern known as a Voronoi diagram, something typically associated with city planning, computer science, and network design. By mapping tiny pores and looping veins in the plant’s leaves, researchers discovered that the plant organizes itself using the same kind of elegant spatial logic humans use to solve complex distance problems — without ever “measuring” anything.

    Earth is flying through ancient supernova debris and scientists found the evidence in Antarctic ice
    14/05/26 05:16:18
    Earth is quietly collecting radioactive debris from an ancient stellar explosion as our Solar System drifts through a giant cloud of gas and dust between the stars. Scientists analyzing Antarctic ice up to 80,000 years old discovered traces of iron-60 — a rare isotope forged in supernova explosions — and found evidence that this “cosmic ash” has been lingering inside the Local Interstellar Cloud for ages. The discovery suggests the cloud surrounding our Solar System was shaped by a long-ago exploding star, offering researchers a new way to study our galactic neighborhood.