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Mar 28 2026SCIENCE

Real‑Time PCR: A 30‑Year Journey of Innovation

The invention of real‑time PCR transformed how scientists measure DNA. Three decades ago, researchers checked amplified samples only after the reaction finished, using gels and visual scans. That method was slow and gave shaky results, making it hard to run many tests at once. A special anniv

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Mar 28 2026HEALTH

Why brain tumor care in kids needs a wake-up call right now

Brain cancer in children isn’t just another disease—it’s a hidden emergency. Every year, families face a tough battle while waiting for better treatments that still feel stuck in the past. The problem isn’t just the lack of progress; it’s that childhood brain tumors are often treated as a smaller ve

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Mar 28 2026HEALTH

Smart Tech Steps In for Back Pain Diagnosis

Doctors often struggle to agree on back problems because scans can look different from person to person. A narrowing in the lower spine called lumbar spinal stenosis is one tough case. Traditional MRI scans help, but experts don’t always see the same things when they look. Now, researchers are testi

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Mar 27 2026HEALTH

Simple Ways We Learned About Health

In the 1950s, a surprising event made people think about their bodies. President Dwight Eisenhower had a heart attack while playing golf in Denver. The nation was shocked because he seemed strong and young. A health official compared the news to learning about Pearl Harbor, showing how serious it wa

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Mar 27 2026ENVIRONMENT

Reducing Farm‑Runoff with Smart Fertilizer Use

Fertilizers give crops the nitrogen they need, but when too much leaches into rivers it harms fish and plants. Scientists need to know how much nitrogen leaves fields each year to plan better solutions. Because real‑world data are scarce, researchers built a computer model that learns from all

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Mar 27 2026WEATHER

Cold Front Brings Warmth, Fog and Fire Warnings

The calm weather we’ve been enjoying is about to change. A chilly front will bring a cool breeze this weekend, but it also creates conditions that can let fires spread fast. Rain is expected to increase next week. A dense fog advisory covers parts of southeast Louisiana and south Mississippi until

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Mar 27 2026ENVIRONMENT

New Team Makes Air Cleaning Easier and Cheaper

Aircapture and Corning are moving from testing to real‑world use. They have worked together for years, but now they plan to sell the system and grow it fast. Corning supplies a special ceramic honeycomb that grabs carbon dioxide from the air. Aircapture builds modular units that fit into fa

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Mar 27 2026CELEBRITIES

Ayesha Explains the Misunderstood Comment About Her Husband

Ayesha Curry recently cleared up a misunderstanding about her early remarks on athletes. She told reporters that when she was fourteen, rules at school stopped her from talking to boys. That restriction shaped how she viewed relationships. She admitted that, as a shy theater student, she believed a

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Mar 26 2026TECHNOLOGY

Deepfake X‑Rays: Even Experts Can’t Tell the Difference

In a recent experiment, medical image specialists were tested on their ability to spot fake X‑ray pictures created by artificial intelligence. The study used 264 images, split evenly between real scans and computer‑made ones. Participants came from twelve hospitals in six countries and ranged from f

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Mar 26 2026SCIENCE

Science, Faith and the Story Behind a Book

The book that sparked debate about how science and religion can fit together was written in the early 1970s by a historian named Reijer Hooykaas. Scholars later argued that the work was either a simple attempt to prove harmony or, at worst, an apologetic for Protestant views. New research shows t

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