<p>Sharla Boehm, a math teacher, spent her summers coding. She’d go on to build what would eventually evolve into the Internet</p>
Vetenskapsnyheter
<p>A growing body of research suggests cannabis poses risks to the developing brain</p>
<p>What you should know about hantavirus, why PCOS is getting a new name, and how some fish hide in an unusual spot</p>
<p>Genetic analysis suggests interbreeding between two groups of human relatives</p>
<p>The long-tailed pygmy rice rat is the primary host for Andes virus, the type of hantavirus responsible for sickening passengers on the <i>MV</i> <i>Hondius</i> cruise ship</p>
<p>A newfound nocturnal navigation system challenges what entomologists thought they knew about how ants find their way</p>
<p>NASA is starting to paint in some of the details of its planned 2027 <i>Artemis III </i>mission, but key questions, such as who its astronauts will be, are yet to be answered</p>
<p>The “coastline paradox” helped to define fractals, but coastlines themselves turn out to be less fractal than thought</p>
<p>Researchers know very little about how long the Andes version of the hantavirus can remain in human hosts</p>
<p>A strange, tiny fish that resembles the famous Sesame Street character camouflages amid red algae thanks to its flamboyant reddish “hairs”</p>
<p>Varda’s plan to develop medicines in microgravity has its advantages, but it requires a big up-front cost</p>
<p>Hantavirus misinformation is spreading fast. COVID trauma and social media algorithms may be to blame</p>
<p>The filmmaker behind the newly released movie <i>Silent Friend</i> shares the scientific and historical inspiration for its story of botanical consciousness</p>
<p>As more people turn to chatbots for medical guidance, the technology is revealing both its promise and its risks</p>
<p>There are parts of the universe, and of the electromagnetic spectrum, that we’re not covering with our telescopes—but not as many as you might think!</p>
<p>Some of Earth’s tiniest life-forms inhabit slowly sinking particles of fish poop and debris, playing a crucial role in ocean carbon storage</p>
<p>This snail became the first animal living on deep-sea hydrothermal vents to be added to the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species—it also turns poisonous sulfur into armor</p>
<p>A new book argues that disparities in fibroids, cancer and diagnosis reveal a lifelong gynecologic health crisis for Black women</p>
<p>The nation’s top court extended a stay on a lower court order banning telemedicine access to mifepristone, a drug used in medication abortions—but the order sets up a longer legal fight</p>
<p>The El Niño climate event is due to return this year, with U.S. forecasters predicting an 82 percent chance of it coming in May through July and a 96 percent chance for it doing so in December through February 2027</p>
<p>A mathematical ratio could explain why AI-generated art doesn’t evoke awe from viewers</p>
<p>In a “breakthrough,” researchers demonstrate how engineered bacteria held in a jellylike container could help fight infection in mice</p>
<p>The hantavirus cruise outbreak may not have started in a garbage dump in Ushuaia, Argentina, after all</p>
<p>The Psyche spacecraft is bound for a metal-rich asteroid that it will examine up close starting in 2029. But first, it needs to swing past the Red Planet</p>
<p>The rare isotope helium-3 is one of Earth’s most precious commodities—so precious, in fact, that it might prove profitable to mine from the moon</p>