A groundbreaking study by researchers at Harvard Medical School has revealed that statins, commonly prescribed cholesterol-lowering drugs, significantly reduce the risk of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and hepatic decompensation in patients…
Author: Muhammad Tuhin
The Remarkable Journey of the Olive Tree: A 3,700-Year Legacy of Human Influence
The olive tree, an enduring symbol of the Mediterranean, has shaped the region’s landscapes, economies, and cultures for thousands of years. Its deep roots in history trace back to early…
New 7T MRI Technique Reveals Hidden Epilepsy Lesions
For decades, patients with drug-resistant epilepsy have faced a harrowing uncertainty. When medications fail, and seizures persist, the only known cure is brain surgery—an intricate operation that depends entirely on…
The Mysteries of Infant Memory: What We Now Know About Your Earliest Experiences
If you’ve ever tried to think back to your earliest memory, chances are you can’t recall much from your first few years of life. Maybe you have a fuzzy recollection…
Scientists Unveil the Hidden Architecture of Memory
How does the brain store memories? It’s a question that has intrigued scientists and philosophers for centuries. Now, groundbreaking research from Scripps Research offers an extraordinary glimpse into the living…
Hominins Used Natural Stone Spheres for Over a Million Years
For over a century, archaeologists and paleoanthropologists have uncovered curious spherical stones scattered across ancient hominin sites in Africa, Europe, and Asia. These enigmatic objects—dubbed stone balls, spheres, spheroids, and…
Birdsong vs. Traffic: How Galápagos Warblers Are Battling Noise Pollution
In the remote expanse of the Pacific Ocean, over 500 miles off Ecuador’s coast, the Galápagos Islands stand as a symbol of pristine nature and evolutionary wonder. This living laboratory…
The Risk-Takers and the Cautious: What Worms Teach Us About the Sexes—And Ourselves
In human society, age-old stereotypes often paint men as daring adventurers and women as careful navigators of risk. From the daredevil acts of early explorers to the popular notion that…
Why Do Hummingbirds Dress Like Males? Nature’s Clever Costume Game
Have you ever wondered why humans wear clothes? Sure, there are practical reasons—protection from the elements, modesty, cultural norms—but one undeniable factor is that we dress to make an impression.…
Dyson Swarms: Harvesting the Sun, Heating the Planet
Imagine a future where humanity—or some distant, hyper-advanced civilization—has grown so powerful, so energy-hungry, that the meager output of an entire planet simply isn’t enough. Our cities sprawl across continents,…
Euclid Telescope Uncovers Thousands of Dwarf Galaxies
Two years into its mission, the European Space Agency’s Euclid space telescope is living up to its promise of unlocking the secrets of the cosmos. Launched on July 1, 2023,…
The Asteroid That Killed the Dinosaurs: Could It Happen Again?
Sixty-six million years ago, Earth was thriving in the Late Cretaceous Period. Dinosaurs roamed forests and plains. Giant marine reptiles dominated the seas. Flying reptiles called pterosaurs soared through the…
Why Are Some Stars Blue and Others Red?
On a clear night, away from the glare of city lights, the sky transforms into a canvas dotted with thousands of shimmering stars. If you pay close attention—not just to…
The Oort Cloud: The Solar System’s Mysterious Outer Shell
Imagine a vast, icy realm, so distant from Earth that even light, traveling at 186,000 miles per second, would take nearly a year to get there. A dark, silent, cosmic…
Can We Survive a Supernova Near Earth?
Imagine one peaceful evening, you look up at the sky. The stars are twinkling, as they always do. But then, suddenly, a brilliant, blinding point of light erupts where there…
The Big Bang Theory: The Epic Story of the Universe’s Birth and Beyond
Since the dawn of humanity, we’ve asked the biggest question imaginable: Where did everything come from? When you look up at the night sky and see stars scattered like diamond…
The Cosmic Ballet: How Galaxies Move Through Space
Far beyond the blue sky, past the twinkling stars that decorate our night, beyond the reach of even the most powerful telescopes, there is a dance that has been unfolding…
Ancient Oxygen Discovery in the Most Distant Galaxy Ever Seen is Rewriting Cosmic History
In a discovery that’s shaking up our understanding of the early universe, two teams of astronomers have independently detected oxygen in the most distant galaxy ever observed—JADES-GS-z14-0. This mind-bending find,…
FAST Discovers an Ancient, Gas-Rich Ultra-Faint Dwarf Galaxy
Imagine peering deep into the cosmos and uncovering a tiny, ancient city, one that has survived billions of years relatively untouched—its secrets locked away in the faint glimmer of its…
Dark Energy Might Be Changing—And It Could Rewrite Our Understanding of the Universe
For decades, scientists have gazed into the vastness of space and wondered about a mysterious force that seems to be pulling the universe apart at an ever-increasing speed. They named…