SCI FI

Apr 20 2026TECHNOLOGY

Using Quantum Tools to Study Drug and Protein Interactions

Scientists often rely on energy calculations to understand how molecules behave in living cells. These calculations help explain how drugs bind to proteins, which is key to designing better medicines. But there's a catch: accurate calculations for large molecules like proteins are tough to do with r

reading time less than a minute
Apr 19 2026SCIENCE

Spotlight on Chromatin: New Tools for Mapping Protein Connections

Scientists have long struggled to see which proteins and RNA strands mingle inside the tight folds of DNA. A new class of “proximity labeling” methods helps researchers spot these interactions right in living cells, giving both a map of where things are and when they happen. The core idea is simp

reading time less than a minute
Apr 19 2026CRIME

Detecting Hidden Drugs: A New Tool for Crime Scene Investigations

Scientists have developed a faster way to spot dangerous drugs at crime scenes. Amphetamine-type stimulants (ATS), like meth and ecstasy, are a big problem worldwide. They harm people's health and create safety risks. Finding these drugs in messy samples is tricky. Crime scene samples often contain

reading time less than a minute
Apr 18 2026TECHNOLOGY

Tech Dreams of Forever Life

Scientists are turning the idea of living forever into a real project. The focus is on “longevity, ” or ways to slow down the body’s natural decline. One big belief is that aging is like software bugs in our DNA, not a broken machine. Because of this, researchers can try to fix the code wit

reading time less than a minute
Apr 17 2026ENVIRONMENT

Past Climate Swings Show Nature Handles Big Temperature Shifts Fast

Scientists have found over two dozen times when Earth’s temperature jumped fast during the last ice age. Between 110, 000 and 12, 000 years ago, Greenland’s air could warm by as much as 16. 5 °C in just decades. These weren’t small, local changes; they reshaped global weather patterns. Tropical rain

reading time less than a minute
Apr 16 2026POLITICS

The UK-China economic puzzle: fixing Middle East tensions

Financial leaders worldwide turn their eyes toward Washington this week, where one of the most powerful finance chiefs from Europe just fired a warning shot about money and markets. The head of the UK Treasury, sitting across from TV cameras in the capital of the United States, made clear that the o

reading time less than a minute
Apr 16 2026OPINION

Science, housing, and history: Three views on America’s future

Science often takes center stage in national debates, but its funding remains a hot topic. One recent space mission showed how science can bring people together, even when politics pull them apart. Instead of cutting funds for research, leaders should support programs like NASA’s moon missions. Afte

reading time less than a minute
Apr 16 2026POLITICS

Iran’s World Cup Journey: Sports vs. Politics

FIFA’s top leader recently made it clear: Iran’s soccer team will compete in the upcoming World Cup. This comes even as tensions rise between Iran and the United States. The decision follows concerns about safety and political interference. Yet officials insist sports should rise above conflict. But

reading time less than a minute
Apr 15 2026SCIENCE

How to Test Protein Similarity with Better Limits

Scientists use a method called hydrogen/deuterium exchange mass spectrometry to study how proteins fold. When comparing two drug versions, they need a test that shows the samples are almost identical, not just different. A new approach called TOST uses two one‑sided tests to set limits of acce

reading time less than a minute
Apr 15 2026FINANCE

Money Skills: The Key to Baltimore’s Future

Financial knowledge is more than a buzzword; it shapes the way people work, buy and invest. In Baltimore, where many families face economic challenges, a lack of money‑management skills can lock students out of higher education and stable jobs. Only about half of Maryland adults feel confident ha

reading time less than a minute