Science Archive - Page 4
Category main136 stories in science category.
Science | Europe
The AI That Found 3,000 New Antibiotics in a Week — What It Means for the Antibiotic Resistance Crisis
An AI model discovered 3,000 potential new antibiotics candidates in one week of computational work. Here is what this means for medicine's most urgent problem.
Science | Europe
The Specific Carbon Market Trick European Companies Are Using to Avoid Emission Costs
European companies are gaming the EU Emissions Trading System in specific legal ways that reduce the climate policy's effectiveness. Here is exactly how it works.
Science | Europe
The Dog Aging Project Just Published Something That Changes Longevity Science
The Dog Aging Project's rapamycin trial results are in. Here is what they show and why they change the landscape of human longevity research.
Science | Europe
The Specific Science of Why Your Memory Works Better After Good Dreams
New research links vivid dreaming to better memory performance the next day. Here is the specific neuroscience mechanism and what it means for how you should approach sleep.
Science | Europe
Why the Artemis Programme Is More Important Than Any Single Mission
Artemis II is making history. Here is why the programme that produced it is even more significant than the mission itself — and what it means for humanity's next century in space.
Science | Europe
The Solar Boom That Saved Europe €3 Billion in One Month Will Keep Saving More
European solar saved €3 billion in March 2026 alone. Here is the compounding math of what happens as more capacity is installed — and the grid problem standing in the way.
Science | Europe
Jeremy Hansen Just Became the First Canadian to Reach Lunar Distance — His Country Is Watching
Jeremy Hansen is the first Canadian ever to travel beyond low Earth orbit. Here is how Canada earned this place in the Artemis programme and what it means for Canadian space ambitions.
Science | Europe
Christina Koch Has Done Something No Woman Has Done Before — And She Is Modest About It
Christina Koch is the furthest-traveled woman in the history of space exploration. Here is who she is, what she has accomplished, and what she said when Orion reached lunar distance.
Science | Europe
How Victor Glover Became the First Black American to Travel to the Moon's Vicinity
Victor Glover is the first Black American to travel to lunar distances. Here is his biography, what this milestone means, and what he said when Orion passed behind the moon.
Science | Europe
The Specific Moment Artemis II Crew Passed the Moon — What They Said and Saw
The Artemis II crew passed behind the moon on April 4, losing contact with Earth for 25 minutes. Here is what that experience was like and what they said after communication was restored.
Science | Europe
Artemis II Is Around the Moon Right Now — Here Is What the Crew Are Actually Doing
Artemis II successfully launched and four astronauts are now closer to the moon than any humans since 1972. Here is the day-by-day account of what they are testing and experiencing.
Science | Europe
The Iran War Has Done What No Policy Could: Made Europe's Green Energy Transition Feel Urgent
The Iran war's energy price shock has done more for Europe's green transition in six weeks than a decade of policy. Here is what this reveals about human behaviour and political will.
Science | Europe
Methane Leaks Are 70% Higher Than Official Figures — The Climate Time Bomb That Governments Hide
Satellite data reveals methane leaks from oil and gas are 70% higher than official figures. Here is the scale of this underreported climate problem and who is responsible.
Science | Europe
The Truth About Asteroid Defense — What Bennu Taught Us We Don't Have
The Bennu mission revealed new details about the asteroid's composition and trajectory. Here is what we know about the threat and how prepared we actually are.
Science | Europe
The Future of Longevity Science: What the Dog Aging Project's Rapamycin Trial Is About to Tell Us
The Dog Aging Project's rapamycin trial is expected to report results in 2026. Here is why this experiment matters for human longevity science and what it could change.
Science | Europe
The AI That Can Predict Heart Attack Risk Years Earlier Than Doctors Can
An AI system using standard ECG data can predict heart attack risk years before conventional risk factors flag danger. Here is the evidence and what it means for cardiovascular medicine.
Science | Europe
How Bedbugs Became Resistant to Every Pesticide We Have — And What Comes Next
Bedbugs have evolved resistance to virtually every pesticide available. Here is the science of how this happened and what the next generation of treatments looks like.
Science | Europe
What the Mantis Shrimp's Strike Is Teaching Engineers About Building Better Helmets
Mantis shrimp dactyl clubs absorb extreme forces without shattering. Engineers are copying the design for military helmets, vehicle armour, and sports safety equipment.
Science | Europe
How the Artemis II Crew Was Chosen — and What Each of Them Brings to the Mission
Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Jeremy Hansen are going to the moon. Here is who they are, how they were selected, and what each brings to the mission.
Science | Europe
How Vivid Dreaming Might Actually Repair Emotional Memories While You Sleep
New research links vivid dreaming to more restorative sleep through emotional memory processing. Here is the science and what it means for understanding sleep disorders.
Science | Europe
The DNA Cancer Connection Is More Dynamic Than Thought — Here Is the Treatment Implication
DNA's constant movement controls gene expression and cancer development. This discovery points toward a new class of cancer treatments targeting DNA architecture rather than genes.
Science | Europe
Everything You Need to Know About the Artemis II Moon Mission That Just Launched
NASA's Artemis II launched on April 1 with four astronauts headed around the moon. Here is what the 10-day mission involves and why it matters for returning humans to the lunar surface.
Science | Europe
The Mantis Shrimp Female That Punches Harder Than Males — Biology's Latest Challenge to Conventional Wisdom
Female mantis shrimp eventually hit far harder than males despite being smaller. Scientists tracked this from youth to adulthood and cannot yet explain why. Here is the mystery.
Science | Europe
The Bennu Sample Contains Clues About Where Earth's Water Came From — Here Is What Scientists Found
Scientists studying the Bennu asteroid sample have found three chemically distinct region types with different water histories. Here is what this tells us about how Earth got its water.