• 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

    Schlichting!: Abgeschreckter Schaum
    08/04/26 14:00:00
    Beim Nudelkochen steigt Schaum auf – und bricht zusammen, sobald man den Deckel hebt. Weil nun der Dampf entweicht und kondensiert, kollabieren die Blasen in einer Kettenreaktion.

    Work-Life-Balance: Langfristig zufriedener dank Teilzeit?
    08/04/26 12:30:00
    Vor allem Frauen wechseln in Teilzeit, um Beruf und Familie verbinden zu können. Eine deutsche Studie hat über rund 30 Jahre verfolgt, was das für den weiteren Lebensweg bedeutet.

    Krebsselbsthilfe: Wie Betroffene und Behandelnde gemeinsam profitieren
    08/04/26 12:12:00
    In dieser Folge des Podcasts »Springer Medizin« werden die Aufgaben, Defizite und Potenziale der Krebsselbsthilfe beleuchtet. 🎙️

    Paul Erdős und seine FBI-Akte
    08/04/26 11:12:00
    Paul Erdős ist einer der wichtigsten Mathematiker des 20. Jahrhunderts. Doch er widmet sich nicht nur einem großen Thema, sondern sammelt viele kleine Probleme, die zu lösen sind. 🎙️

    Künstliche Intelligenz: KI findet seit Jahren schlummernde Software-Schwachstellen
    08/04/26 11:00:00
    Ein neues KI-Modell der Entwicklerfirma Anthropic hat zahlreiche Sicherheitslücken in verbreiteter Software gefunden. Die Firma will es darum zunächst unter Verschluss halten.

  • Latest Science News -- ScienceDaily

    Scientists map the brain’s hidden wiring using RNA barcodes in major breakthrough
    08/04/26 03:37:16
    Researchers have developed a cutting-edge technique that uses RNA “barcodes” to map how neurons connect, capturing thousands of links with single-synapse precision. The method transforms brain mapping into a sequencing task, making it faster and more scalable than traditional approaches. In mice, it revealed surprising new connections between brain cells that were previously unknown. This could open the door to earlier detection and targeted treatment of neurological diseases.

    Scientists discover reversible male birth control that stops sperm production
    08/04/26 02:52:22
    Scientists at Cornell University may be closing in on the long-sought “holy grail” of male contraception: a safe, reversible, nonhormonal method that completely halts sperm production. In a breakthrough mouse study, researchers used a compound called JQ1 to temporarily shut down meiosis—the critical process that produces sperm—without causing lasting harm. After treatment stopped, sperm production bounced back, fertility returned, and the animals produced healthy offspring.

    Your vitamin D levels in midlife could shape your brain decades later
    07/04/26 13:47:09
    Vitamin D levels in midlife may play a bigger role in long-term brain health than previously thought. In a study following nearly 800 people over 16 years, those with higher vitamin D levels in their 30s and 40s had lower levels of tau protein later on, a key marker linked to dementia.

    Scientists solve 30-year mystery of a hidden nutrient that protects the brain and fights cancer
    07/04/26 12:57:46
    Scientists have finally uncovered the missing link in how our bodies absorb queuosine, a rare micronutrient crucial for brain health, memory, stress response, and cancer defense. For decades, researchers suspected a transporter had to exist, but it remained elusive—until now. By identifying the gene SLC35F2 as the gateway into cells, this breakthrough opens new possibilities for therapies and highlights how diet and gut microbes profoundly shape human health.

    Scientists found a “lost world” of animals that shouldn’t exist yet
    07/04/26 05:41:53
    A remarkable fossil discovery in southwest China is rewriting the story of how complex animal life began, showing that many key animal groups appeared millions of years earlier than scientists once believed. Dating back over 540 million years, the fossils reveal a surprisingly diverse and advanced ecosystem from the late Ediacaran period—before the famous Cambrian explosion. Among the finds are early relatives of starfish, worm-like creatures, and even ancestors of animals with backbones, suggesting that the roots of modern life were already taking shape.