Quantum Tunneling Makes DNA More Unstable

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September 21, 2022

Genetics

Quantum Tunneling Makes DNA More Unstable

The freaky physics phenomenon of quantum tunneling may mutate genes

By Lars Fischer,Gary Stix

Planetary Science

NASA's Asteroid-Crashing DART Mission Is Ready for Impact

The DART mission to redirect an asteroid could be just the beginning of a robust planetary-defense program

By Keith Cooper,SPACE.com

Privacy

How Census Data Put Trans Children at Risk

The Census Bureau must improve its data anonymization methods to protect vulnerable groups

By Os Keyes,Abraham D. Flaxman

Anatomy

Chewing Consumes a Surprising Amount of Energy

Chomping on food takes so much energy that it shaped human evolution. Our ancestors spent many hours a day chewing, which may have shaped our teeth and jaws.

By Christopher Intagliata | 03:28

Artificial Intelligence

Artificial Intelligence Needs Both Pragmatists and Blue-Sky Visionaries

For humanity's brightest future, the blue-sky, lofty thinkers in AI need the help of the muddy-boots pragmatists

By Ben Shneiderman

Space Exploration

NASA's Artemis Delays Fuel Controversy over Rocket Design

The first test flight of the space agency's Space Launch System rocket and Orion spacecraft is plagued by delays decades in the making

By Nadia Drake

Climate Change

Vultures Prevent Tens of Millions of Metric Tons of Carbon Emissions Each Year

Vultures get a bad reputation for their carrion-scavenging ways, but their dietary habits prevent the release of greenhouse gases

By Ian Rose

Fossil Fuels

U.S. Fossil-Fuel Reserves Alone Could Put Global Climate Targets Out of Reach

A new fossil-fuel tracker tallies global oil, gas, and coal reserves and projects to show how current production could drive the world above the threshold of 1.5 degrees Celsius

By Heather Richards,E&E News

Space Exploration

The FCC Is Finally Taking Space Junk Seriously

A new potential rule from the U.S. Federal Communications Commission would set a five-year deadline for defunct satellites to be removed from space

By Jonathan O'Callaghan

Drug Use

A Recent Supreme Court Ruling Will Help People In Pain

By ruling in favor of two doctors accused of running pill mills, SCOTUS is clarifying opioid prescription practices

By Maia Szalavitz
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