The Smartest Way to Use Rapid At-Home COVID Tests

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October 12, 2021

Health Care

The Smartest Way to Use Rapid At-Home COVID Tests

The self-administered tests are sold over the counter, holding out the promise of safer gatherings. But interpreting results requires savvy

By Tara Santora

Anthropology

Mammoths Roamed when Humans Started Using Tobacco at Least 12,300 Years Ago

A dig in the Nevada desert finds telltale seeds at the site of a late Paleolithic hearth

By Rachel Nuwer

Astronomy

'Auroral' Exoplanets Could Help Boost Searches for Alien Life

Four candidate worlds found via flashes of radio emission may be the first of many revealed by a new planet-hunting technique

By Nola Taylor Tillman

Quantum Physics

AI Designs Quantum Physics Experiments beyond What Any Human Has Conceived

Originally built to speed up calculations, a machine-learning system is now making shocking progress at the frontiers of experimental quantum physics

By Anil Ananthaswamy

Pollution

Landmark Ozone Treaty Could Prevent More Than 400 Million Cases of Cancer

The Montreal Protocol has helped heal the ozone layer that blocks harmful ultraviolet rays

By John Fialka,E&E News

Conservation

Channeling Thoreau: 24 Hours on Pea Island

A young writer camps out on a tiny bit of land at the western end of the Long Island Sound

By Jordan Salama

Policy

The NFL's Racist 'Race Norming' Is an Afterlife of Slavery

A statistical manipulation that underpaid Black players in concussion settlements exemplifies American football's immersion in the legacy of slavery

By Tracie Canada,Chelsey R. Carter

Particle Physics

New Universal Force Tested by Blasting Neutrons through Crystal

A recent experiment has placed the best-yet limits on the strength of a long-sought fifth fundamental force

By Karmela Padavic-Callaghan

Pharmaceuticals

How Antiviral Pill Molnupiravir Shot Ahead in the COVID Drug Hunt

The Merck pill, which could become the first oral antiviral COVID treatment, forces the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus to mutate itself to death

By Cassandra Willyard,Nature magazine

Climate Change

Beyond the Winners, Nobel Prize for Climate Science Is a Victory for Many

Research in the field is more collaborative than the Nobel awards can acknowledge

By Gavin Schmidt

Fossil Fuels

More Countries Join Global Pledge to Cut Methane Emissions

Dozens of nations, representing 30 percent of the world's emissions, have indicated support ahead of crucial climate talks

By Sara Schonhardt,E&E News

Policy

Scientists: When Talking to the Public, Please Speak Plainly

Jargon is appropriate when you're speaking with colleagues, but it's a turnoff for the rest of us

By Naomi Oreskes

Animals

Save the Right Whales by Cutting through the Wrong Noise

New noise-cutting tech could pinpoint North Atlantic right whales and other species

By Sam Jones

Medicine

A Strategy for Rescheduling Psilocybin

There are three legal pathways to deregulating the drug under the Controlled Substances Act

By Mason Marks
FROM THE STORE

How to Do Anything Better

When we think about the things we do every day—driving, working, parenting—we realize that even with tasks we are generally good at, there is always room for improvement. As always, science is on the case. This eBook contains a collection of columns written by health and psychology journalist Sunny Sea Gold, whose work has also appeared in O: The Oprah Magazine and Parents. These selections, published by Scientific American between 2009 – 2017, offer practical tips for acing life from nailing that job interview to giving the perfect gift.

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FROM THE ARCHIVE

Slovakia Offers a Lesson in How Rapid Testing Can Fight COVID

One of the country's top epidemiologists explains how population-wide use of rapid antigen tests—in combination with other measures—helped get its outbreak under control

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