Science Explorer
Science Explorer

Science Explorer

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Sudden Sight Loss Risk Almost 5x Higher With Wegovy Than Ozempic, Study Finds
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Sudden Sight Loss Risk Almost 5x Higher With Wegovy Than Ozempic, Study Finds

There's an urgent need for more research.

Study Reveals a 'Turning Point' in US Life Expectancy
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Study Reveals a 'Turning Point' in US Life Expectancy

A troubling mortality trend is emerging.

Each Stressful Person in Your Life May Age You by Months, Study Finds
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Each Stressful Person in Your Life May Age You by Months, Study Finds

Do you know any 'hasslers'?

The Sun's Great Escape
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The Sun's Great Escape

Our Sun didn't always call this quiet corner of the Milky Way home. New research using data from the European Space Agency's Gaia satellite has uncovered evidence that the Sun fled the chaotic heart of our Galaxy four to six billion years ago and it didn't go alone. A vast migration of stars almost identical to our own swept outward together, a great exodus that may have made life on Earth possible. The story of how astronomers pieced this together is as remarkable as the discovery itself.

Life, But Not As We Know It
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Life, But Not As We Know It

For sixty years, the search for life beyond Earth has been built on the single assumption that alien life will look enough like us to recognise. A radical new idea called Assembly Theory is challenging that assumption. A team from the Arizona State University has proposed applying it to the atmospheres of distant exoplanets, not to look for specific gases, but to measure how much complexity a planetary atmosphere contains, and whether blind chemistry alone could plausibly have produced it. If it works, it could transform the way humanity searches for life among the stars, and redefine what we are even searching for.