Hunt for Alien Life Tops Next-Gen Wish List for U.S. Astronomy

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November 04, 2021

Astrophysics

Hunt for Alien Life Tops Next-Gen Wish List for U.S. Astronomy

A major report outlining the highest priorities and recommendations for U.S. astronomy has finally been released, revealing the shape of things to come

By Lee Billings

Climate Change

Climate Change Is Acidifying and Contaminating Drinking Water and Alpine Ecosystems

Hotter, drier mountains leach more metal into streams from abandoned mines and natural deposits

By Elizabeth Miller

Particle Physics

Can Sterile Neutrinos Exist?

Physicists have wondered if neutrino particles come in a mysterious fourth variety. Now new experimental findings complicate the question

By Clara Moskowitz

Diversity

The Lost Women of Science, Episode 1: The Question Mark

When physician and pathologist Dorothy Andersen confronted a slew of confounding infant deaths, she suspected the accepted diagnosis wasn’t right. Her medical sleuthing led to the world’s understanding of cystic fibrosis, a disease that affects the lungs, the pancreas and a host of other organs. But she is by no means a household name. Who was this scientist, and how did she come to quietly make such an important medical contribution? This is the Lost Women of Science podcast

By Katie Hafner,The Lost Women of Science Initiative

Energy

What Is a Smart Grid, and How Might One Protect Our Energy Future?

Our electric grid is old and fraying, but new technology could insulate us from the possibility of widespread blackouts and cyberattacks.

By Michael Tabb,Jeffery DelViscio,Andrea Gawrylewski

Climate Change

U.S. Agrees to End Fossil Fuel Financing Abroad

The move could shift funding toward renewable energy projects in low-income countries
By Sara Schonhardt,E&E News

Vaccines

Why Vaccine Doses Differ for Kids and Adults

An immunologist explains how the immune system changes as people mature

By Brian Peppers,The Conversation US

Policy

Where Gun Stores Open, Gun Homicides Increase

More oversight of dealers and investment in impoverished communities are key to reducing violence, say experts

By Jim Daley

Education

Weakened Tenure Protections Will Harm Students as Well as Faculty

A unanimous vote by Georgia’s Board of Regents could stifle academic freedom

By Kim Cobb

Vaccines

Trust Us: Nurses Are at the Breaking Point

The pandemic has brought the nursing profession into crisis; the solution is in the public’s hands

By Beth Wathen,Amanda Bettencourt

Medicine

Women's heart health is not just about hormones

Heart-disease risk increases as women get older but explanations that centre on changes after menopause don’t tell the full story

By Jumana Saleh

Medicine

Cells or drugs? The race to regenerate the heart

Researchers are debating how to convince the heart to heal itself instead of laying down scar tissue after a heart attack

By Benjamin Plackett
FROM THE STORE

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FROM THE ARCHIVE

This Report Could Make or Break the Next 30 Years of U.S. Astronomy

A battle for the future of American stargazing is about to begin—and the stakes are sky high

QUOTE OF THE DAY

"We stand at the threshold of a new golden era of discovery...Might we actually find evidence for life on another planet? This report, true to its name, lays out robust pathways to answer this question, and we can be the generation that answers it!"

Heidi Hammel, vice president for science at the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy

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