Why Is Omicron So Contagious?

Trouble viewing? View in your browser.
View all Scientific American publications.
    
December 17, 2021

Epidemiology

Why Is Omicron So Contagious?

The new coronavirus variant may be better than other versions at avoiding human immune defenses—but that ability may change in different countries

By Charles Schmidt

Animals

Newfound Millipede Breaks World Record for the Most Legs

It's a millipede, literally

By Cameron Duke,LiveScience

Economics

In Lagos, Vulnerable Communities Are Buried by Urbanization

A guest podcast from Undark: As Nigeria's mangrove forests are covered with sand, dredging threatens the livelihoods of local people

By Maggie Andresen,Lydia Chain

Agriculture

Tweaks to U.S. Christmas Trees Could Help Them Survive Climate Change

International species and selective breeding methods are helping to preserve the evergreen tradition

By Nikk Ogasa

Vaccines

COVID Quickly, Episode 21: Vaccines Against Omicron, and Pandemic Progress

Today we bring you a new episode in our podcast series COVID, Quickly. Every two weeks, Scientific American's senior health editors Tanya Lewis and Josh Fischman catch you up on the essential developments in the pandemic: from vaccines to new variants and everything in between.

You can listen to all past episodes here.

By Josh Fischman,Jeffery DelViscio | 05:22

Inequality

Black Children, as Well as Other Minority Kids, Fare Worse Than White Children in Common Surgeries

The reasons for unequal patient outcomes may lie in implicit biases at the hospitals that treat them

By Claudia Wallis

Climate Change

Emerging Services Aim to Link Climate to Disasters in Real Time

Several countries are looking to routinely look for the fingerprints of warming right after extreme weather events happen

By Chelsea Harvey,E&E News

Robotics

Want to Get Humans to Trust Robots? Let Them Dance

A performance with living and mechanical partners can teach researchers how to design more relatable bots

By Sam Jones

Vaccines

The Risk of Vaccinated COVID Transmission Is Not Low

After my son got sick, I dived into the data, and it turns out vaccinated people can and do spread COVID

By Jennifer Frazer

Weather

Tornadoes at Night and in the Southeast Are Especially Deadly

Population density and a prevalence of mobile homes make the region a hotspot for tornado deaths

By Andrea Thompson

Arts

Poem: 'The Scalar Nature of Snow'

Science in meter and verse

By Glenn R. McLaughlin
FROM THE STORE

ADVERTISEMENT

FROM THE ARCHIVE

How the Omicron Variant Got So Many Scary Mutations So Quickly

The numerous changes in the coronavirus's spike protein could have arisen in an isolated population or an immunocompromised person—or animals

QUOTE OF THE DAY

"We went right from the ancestral Alpha variant to Delta...And those sorts of things may change how much of the population is now susceptible to this new Omicron variant. We'll just have to see how this settles out over time."

Jeffrey Shaman, infectious disease modeler at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health

LATEST ISSUES

Questions?   Comments?

Send Us Your Feedback
Download the Scientific American App
Download on the App Store
Download on Google Play

To view this email as a web page, go here.

You received this email because you opted-in to receive email from Scientific American.

To ensure delivery please add news@email.scientificamerican.com to your address book.

Unsubscribe     Manage Email Preferences     Privacy Policy     Contact Us

Comments

Popular Posts