Atmospheric rivers, a new kind of quantum interaction, and genetic insights on aging

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February 09, 2023

Computing

New Exascale Supercomputer Can Do a Quintillion Calculations a Second

New “exascale” supercomputers will bring breakthroughs in science. But the technology also exists to study nuclear weapons

By Sarah Scoles

Medicine

New COVID Antiviral Cuts Hospitalizations in Half

An injection of a type of interferon drastically reduced the risk of severe COVID in a late-stage trial

By Simon Makin

Reproduction

A Common Antibiotic Could Prevent Deaths from Childbirth Complications

One in three cases of maternal sepsis can be prevented with a single dose of antibiotic, a study in low- and middle-income countries shows

By Allison Parshall

Archaeology

Surprising Chemicals Were Used to Embalm Egyptian Mummies

Resins used by ancient Egyptians to prepare bodies for the afterlife are found in vessels in a 2,500-year-old workshop

By Ewen Callaway,Nature magazine

Exercise

We Can Make Football Safer

Through better equipment, improved knowledge of head injury, and better medical care, we can mitigate the effects of concussion at all levels of football

By Steven Broglio

Climate Change

Inside the Race to Find Earth's Oldest Ice

A global race is on to drill for the oldest known layers of Antarctic ice so researchers can peer back in time to a warmer climate to better understand the planet’s hotter future

By Christian Elliott

Climate Change

Solving Cement's Massive Carbon Problem

New techniques and novel ingredients can greatly reduce the immense carbon emissions from cement and concrete production

By Mark Fischetti,Nick Bockelman,Wil V. Srubar

Artificial Intelligence

Coming Soon to Your Podcast Feed: Science, Quickly

A new era in Scientific American audio history is about to drop starting next week—get ready for a science variety show guaranteed to quench your curiosity in under 10 minutes.

By Jeffery DelViscio,Tulika Bose | 04:10
FROM THE STORE

Mathematics in the 21st Century

 

One of the most powerful tools in the science arsenal, mathematics allows scientists across disciplines to test hypotheses about the real world. In this eBook, we look at important recent advances in the field and examine the role of modeling and statistical analysis in understanding biology, physics, politics and more.

 

Buy Now
FROM THE ARCHIVE

The U.S. Needs a National Strategic Computing Reserve

One year after supercomputers worked together to fight COVID, it’s time to broaden the partnership to prepare for other crises

QUOTE OF THE DAY

"Supercomputers are essentially brute-force tools. So you have to use them in intelligent ways. And that's where the fun comes in, where you scratch your head and say, 'How can I actually use this possibly blunt instrument to do what I really want to do?'"

Salman Habib, director of the computational science division at Argonne National Laboratory.

WHAT WE'RE READING

Turkey Earthquake: Why Did So Many Buildings Collapse?

The sight of newly constructed apartments collapsing in the earthquakes that hit Turkey has sparked anger. The BBC examined three new buildings, turned to rubble, to find out what they reveal about building safety.

By Jake Horton & William Armstrong | BBC | Jan. 9, 2023

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