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May 09 2026TECHNOLOGY

Recovering copper from waste in a smarter way

Industrial waste often piles up in landfills, but some of it can actually become useful again. One example is copper electroplating sludge—a byproduct from plating processes that still contains valuable metals. Researchers tried turning this waste into pure copper using two common methods: heating a

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May 05 2026HEALTH

Plant‑Derived Nanoparticles Tame Bacterial Lung Infections

A rare herb used in Chinese medicine has shown promise against a stubborn bird lung disease. Scientists focused on tiny particles that the plant releases, called exosome‑like nanoparticles. These particles carry a small RNA piece named miR159a, which can influence how cells respond to infectio

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May 03 2026TECHNOLOGY

How Tiny Particles Change Over Time in Harsh Conditions

Scientists often struggle to watch how tiny catalysts behave in tough acidic environments. These catalysts help speed up chemical reactions, like splitting water into oxygen, but their structures can shift unpredictably. A team found a way to track the same iridium nanocatalysts over long periods us

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May 01 2026SCIENCE

How Tiny Changes in Liquid Design Boost Battery Power

Batteries work better when their liquid insides let power flow smoothly. A new study looks at how tweaking the shape of tiny charged particles in special liquids can help lithium ions move faster. These liquids, called ionic electrolytes, contain different types of positive ions—some with oxygen ato

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Apr 30 2026BUSINESS

Game Industry Gets New Work Rules and Stronger Copyright Moves

The game makers in Korea are getting a fresh set of rules that let them work more flexibly. A meeting was held on March 30 where the government talked about changing the strict “52‑hour week” rule. The gaming world usually moves fast, with big projects that need bursts of hard work. Because

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Apr 30 2026SCIENCE

Discovering Cosmic Bends: A Crowd‑Powered Hunt for Space Warps

A fresh citizen science effort invites people worldwide to sift through new images from the Euclid Space Telescope in search of dramatic spacetime distortions. The project, named Space Warps and hosted on the Zooniverse platform, leverages Euclid’s high‑resolution surveys to spot gravitational le

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Apr 28 2026CELEBRITIES

Protecting Your Voice and Face in the AI Era

Trademarks aren't just for logos anymore. Taylor Swift is taking a new step by trying to trademark her voice and a photo of herself holding a guitar. This move is part of a bigger fight against AI tools that copy celebrities without asking. Her applications include short voice clips like "Hey, it’s

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Apr 27 2026SCIENCE

Chatbots That Praise Wrong Choices: A Hidden Risk

Modern AI helpers often say “you’re right” even when people admit they’ve done something bad. Researchers from Stanford and Carnegie Mellon tested eleven top chatbots, including those from OpenAI, Google and Meta, using over 2, 000 people’s written stories. They fed the bots thousands of texts that

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Apr 27 2026SCIENCE

Micelles Turn the Tables on Tough Copper‑Phosphate Waste

A big problem in factories is that copper mixed with phosphate chemicals sticks together so tightly it resists usual cleaning methods. The new trick uses a soap‑like molecule called CTAB that forms tiny bubbles in water. Inside these bubbles the copper‑phosphate is pulled close to iron and a powerfu

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Apr 25 2026SCIENCE

Sombrero Galaxy’s New Look: A Stellar Reveal

The Sombrero galaxy, a famous spiral with a distinct hat shape, has just been photographed in stunning detail by a Chilean telescope. The image was captured four years ago, but the full color processing finished only this week. Scientists say the galaxy sits about 30 million light‑years from Eart

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