Stephanie Pappas
Stephanie Pappas
Freelance science writer, general enthusiast.Source
Denver, Colorado
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Aliens haven't contacted Earth because there's no sign of intelligence here, new answer to the Fermi paradox suggests

Aliens haven't contacted Earth because there's no sign of intelligence here, new answer to the Fermi paradox suggests

A new paper claims that intelligent aliens would only be interested in contacting the most technologically advanced planets, and Earth doesn't make the cut. Is the Milky Way home to intelligent aliens? Why haven't aliens gotten in touch? Maybe they think Earth is boring. A new preprint paper published to the arXiv database suggests that intelligent extraterrestrials might not find planets that host life particularly interesting. If life has evolved on many planets in the galaxy, then aliens are probably more interested in the ones where there are signs not just of biology but technology,...

December 15, 2022
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Wee footprint of baby stegosaur discovered in China

Wee footprint of baby stegosaur discovered in China

Live Science is supported by its audience. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. .A hundred million years ago, a wee baby stegosaur pranced around on its hind feet in what is today China. The footprint of this adorable, cat-size tot from the was discovered in Xinjiang, a territory in northwest China. At only 2.25 inches (5.7 centimeters) long, it's the smallest stegosaur print ever found, the authors reported March 3 .The site where the tiny prints were found was also pock-marked with large footprints from stegosaurs — a group of herbivorous...

April 19, 2021
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HIV vaccine stimulates 'rare immune cells' in early human trials

HIV vaccine stimulates 'rare immune cells' in early human trials

Live Science is supported by its audience. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. .A new vaccine for is raising excitement after its first in-human trials showed 97% success at stimulating a rare set of immune cells that play a key role in fighting the virus. The approach is a new attempt to head off the fast-mutating human immunodeficiency virus, which has eluded vaccines in the past because it attacks part of the immune system directly and is good at evading other immune defenses. Developed by scientists at Scripps Research in San Diego and...

April 7, 2021
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Why Russian scientists just deployed a giant telescope beneath Lake Baikal

Why Russian scientists just deployed a giant telescope beneath Lake Baikal

Space is supported by its audience. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. .Russian scientists have deployed a giant telescope into the frigid depths of in southern Siberia to search for the tiniest known particles in the universe. The telescope, Baikal-GVD, is designed to search for , which are nearly massless subatomic particles with no electrical charge. Neutrinos are everywhere, but they interact so weakly with the forces around them that they're hugely challenging to detect.That's why scientists are looking under Lake Baikal, which, at...

March 22, 2021
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Ultrapowerful magnetic fields revealed in 1st ever image of a black hole

Ultrapowerful magnetic fields revealed in 1st ever image of a black hole

Live Science is supported by its audience. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. .First-of-their-kind images of the magnetic field around a may explain how the black hole shoots out a jet of energy and matter more than 5,000 light-years into space. The new images come from the first black hole ever photographed, which sits at the center of Messier 87, a giant elliptical galaxy 55 million light-years away. In 2017, an international collaboration of more than 300 researchers coordinated 11 radio telescopes around the globe to observe the center...

March 24, 2021
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Meet the swirlon, a new kind of matter that bends the laws of physics

Meet the swirlon, a new kind of matter that bends the laws of physics

Live Science is supported by its audience. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. .Fish school, insects swarm and birds fly in murmurations. Now, new research finds that on the most basic level, this kind of group behavior forms a new kind of active matter, called a swirlonic state. Physical laws such as — which states that as a force applied to an object increases, its acceleration increases, and that as the object's mass increases, its acceleration decreases — apply to passive, nonliving matter, ranging from atoms to planets. But much of the...

March 1, 2021
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Rare red sprite and blue jet create otherworldly light show above Hawaii

Rare red sprite and blue jet create otherworldly light show above Hawaii

TrendingSpace is supported by its audience. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Sprites and jets are fleeting atmospheric phenomena, hard enough to witness, let alone photograph. But a new image from an observatory in Hawaii captures both a red sprite and a blue jet in the same shot. The photo, , comes courtesy a "cloud cam" at the Gemini North telescope, part of the International Gemini Observatory located on Maunakea. Sprites and jets are upper-atmospheric phenomena caused by electrical discharges. Sprites, which are typically...

March 2, 2021
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Lumpy, 30-pound meteorite that crashed in Sweden recovered in local village

Lumpy, 30-pound meteorite that crashed in Sweden recovered in local village

Space is supported by its audience. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. .A half-melted hunk of iron-rich rock found in Uppsala, Sweden, is part of a meteorite that fell there in November 2020. The lumpy meteorite is about the size of a loaf of bread and weighs around 31 pounds (14 kilograms), according to the Swedish Museum of Natural History. It was once part of a larger space rock, probably weighing more than 9 tons (8.1 metric tons), that created a over Uppsala on Nov. 7. After that impact, scientists at the Swedish Museum of...

March 1, 2021
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Dinosaur-killing space rock may have originated at the edge of the solar system

Dinosaur-killing space rock may have originated at the edge of the solar system

Space is supported by its audience. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. .The chunk of space rock that killed the nonavian may have been a piece of a comet that Jupiter's gravity kicked onto a collision course with Earth. A new study suggests that the dinosaur-killing object was not an asteroid from between Jupiter and Mars, as is often hypothesized. Instead, the study authors argue, the impactor was a piece of a comet from the Oort cloud, a mass of icy bodies that surrounds the outer edges of the solar system. So-called long-period...

February 22, 2021
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