• 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

    Kombinatorik beim Festival
    15/01/26 09:15:00
    Heutiges Thema: Kombinatorik

    Erdumgebung: NASA-Satellit beobachtet die Geokorona
    15/01/26 09:00:00
    Mit dem Carruthers Geocorona Observatory konnte die Wasserstoffkorona unseres Planeten im Ultravioletten im Ganzen beobachtet werden. Sie entsteht durch entweichenden Wasserstoff.

    Geruchssinn : Pferde können deine Angst riechen
    15/01/26 08:30:00
    Reiter vermuten schon lange: Angst überträgt sich aufs Pferd. Die Tiere erschnuppern Nervosität wohl sogar mittels menschlichem Angstschweiß – und werden kontaktscheuer.

    Das längste Gebirge der Welt
    15/01/26 08:14:00
    Die Entdeckung des längsten Gebirges der Welt und die Kontinentaldrift-Theorie 🎙️

    Welche Chancen und Risiken das Anlagejahr 2026 bringt
    15/01/26 08:14:00
    die wichtigsten Rahmenbedingungen und Prognosen des Anlagejahres 2026 🎙️

  • Latest Science News -- ScienceDaily

    Scientists uncover a hidden type of diabetes in newborns
    15/01/26 03:18:23
    Researchers have discovered a rare new type of diabetes that affects babies early in life. The condition is caused by changes in a single gene that prevent insulin-producing cells from working properly. When these cells fail, blood sugar rises and diabetes develops, often alongside neurological problems. The findings help explain a long-standing medical mystery and deepen understanding of diabetes overall.

    Scientists finally uncover why statins cause muscle pain
    14/01/26 17:06:53
    A new discovery may explain why so many people abandon cholesterol-lowering statins because of muscle pain and weakness. Researchers found that certain statins can latch onto a key muscle protein and trigger a tiny but harmful calcium leak inside muscle cells. That leak may weaken muscles directly or activate processes that slowly break them down, offering a long-sought explanation for statin-related aches.

    A 3,000-year high: Alaska’s Arctic is entering a dangerous new fire era
    14/01/26 14:41:19
    For thousands of years, wildfires on Alaska’s North Slope were rare. That changed sharply in the 20th century, when warming temperatures dried soils and fueled the spread of shrubs, setting the stage for intense fires. Peat cores and satellite data reveal that fire activity since the 1950s has reached record levels. The findings suggest the Arctic is entering a new, more dangerous fire era.

    “Marine darkwaves”: Hidden ocean blackouts are putting sealife at risk
    14/01/26 15:45:06
    Scientists have identified a newly recognized threat lurking beneath the ocean’s surface: sudden episodes of underwater darkness that can last days or even months. Caused by storms, sediment runoff, algae blooms, and murky water, these “marine darkwaves” dramatically reduce light reaching the seafloor, putting kelp forests, seagrass, and other light-dependent life at risk.

    New research challenges the cold dark matter assumption
    15/01/26 06:42:07
    Dark matter, one of the Universe’s greatest mysteries, may have been born blazing hot instead of cold and sluggish as scientists long believed. New research shows that dark matter particles could have been moving near the speed of light shortly after the Big Bang, only to cool down later and still help form galaxies. By focusing on a chaotic early era known as post-inflationary reheating, researchers reveal that “red-hot” dark matter could survive long enough to become the calm, structure-building force we see today.