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Showing posts with the label newscientistNew Scientist - Home

Travel between India and Australia likely to increase after migration deal signed in Sydney

Subscribe to our YouTube channel for free here: https://ift.tt/x8K63Gi For more on Modi’s Australia visit: https://sc.mp/lnj9 Indian Prime Minister Nerandra Modi visited Australia and held meetings with his Australian counterpart Anthony Albanese in Sydney on May 24, 2023 to discuss regional security, economic ties and energy. Australia is seeking to diversify its export markets and become less reliant on China, its largest trading partner. The two countries also signed a migration deal to boost travel from India. Support us: https://ift.tt/OIC6wTk Follow us on: Website: https://www.scmp.com Facebook: https://ift.tt/bNVDujp Twitter: https://twitter.com/scmpnews Instagram: https://ift.tt/UrBfMRx Linkedin: https://ift.tt/NucSMJL #scmp #Asia #Australia source https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UBnK1oKrYAk

Disney is working on AI animatronics that interact with park guests

TV show The Imagineering Story and book Magic Journey by Kevin P. Rafferty show just how much academic research goes on at the home of Mickey Mouse, says Chris Stokel-Walker from New Scientist - Home https://ift.tt/3g5eFoX

Complex cells may have evolved due to a shortage of trace metals

Trace metals like iron and copper became rare in the oceans around 2 billion years ago, around when complex “eukaryotic” cells first appeared from New Scientist - Home https://ift.tt/3eMwKYA

BAME scientists half as likely to get funding from UK research council

Black, Asian and ethnic minority scientists in the UK are almost half as likely to be awarded funding to research environmental science than their white peers from New Scientist - Home https://ift.tt/2B0CFLn

City in UK takes steps to test entire population for coronavirus

Southampton in the UK plans to test thousands of people each week using cheap saliva tests. If the trial goes well, researchers want to test everyone in the city once a week from New Scientist - Home https://ift.tt/2Z0LrAE

Consciousness isn't just the brain: The body shapes your sense of self

Electrical signals coming from your heart and other organs influence how you perceive the world, the decisions you take, your sense of who you are and consciousness itself. from New Scientist - Home https://ift.tt/31hkGLn

Flamingos fly over the alien-like landscape of Kenya’s Lake Magadi

Flamingos fly across a lake of multicoloured swirls in the Great Rift valley in this shot by US photographer Phillip Chang from New Scientist - Home https://ift.tt/37QDy52

UK citizens' assembly shows big support for green covid-19 recovery

A UK citizens’ assembly chosen to be representative of UK demographics wants the UK government’s coronavirus economic recovery plans to help the country meet climate goals from New Scientist - Home https://ift.tt/2Btx8ww

Why it's more fun to be a mischievous goose than a blood-thirsty shark

Playing as a murderous shark on a rampage isn't nearly as fun as being a horrible goose terrorising a village, finds Jacob Aron from New Scientist - Home https://ift.tt/2YihkFV

There's a bird that tricks other animals into dropping their lunch

The Bird Way by Jennifer Ackerman explores how small monitoring devices are helping researchers get closer to birds than ever before to uncover hidden aspects of their lives from New Scientist - Home https://ift.tt/2YSkNdd

The Milky Way is about to completely obliterate a neighbouring galaxy

One of the Milky Way’s neighbour galaxies has been disrupting our galaxy’s disk for billions of years, but now it is on the brink of being shredded into pieces from New Scientist - Home https://ift.tt/30QMy8M

Extinct gophers evolved horns on their noses for fighting predators

More than 5 million years ago, North America was home to the only rodents to ever have horns on their noses – and they may have evolved them to defend against predators from New Scientist - Home https://ift.tt/37G94Td

The four major public health threats we need to act on now

Viral pandemics aren't the only worry: antibiotic resistance, a drop in vaccination and other issues could rapidly put the world's health in peril from New Scientist - Home https://ift.tt/2YKsguL

This won't be the last pandemic. Where will the next one come from?

Several types of viruses could pose a global threat, not just the coronavirus that causes covid-19 from New Scientist - Home https://ift.tt/3hKDNDk

We knew how to prevent a pandemic like covid-19, so what went wrong?

Some nations weren't prepared, others ignored best-laid plans. Why getting ready for next time has to start now from New Scientist - Home https://ift.tt/2N1w3P0

The pandemic playbook: A step-by-step guide to containing an outbreak

We've stopped deadly outbreaks in the past. And we can do it again, says epidemiologist Adam Kucharski from New Scientist - Home https://ift.tt/311BUwb

Genetically modified goats can produce cancer drugs in their milk

Genetically modified goats can make the bowel cancer drug cetuximab in their milk, which could cut its high cost and allow more people to use it from New Scientist - Home https://ift.tt/2ADfF4A

Aerial images highlighting fight to protect the Amazon win photo award

Pablo Albarenga’s series documenting threatened Amazonian environments and the people defending them has won the top prize at the Sony World Photography Award 2020 from New Scientist - Home https://ift.tt/2UMPa3K

Upload review: An odd afterlife where your brain is kept in the cloud

Greg Daniels's new show Upload is fizzing with interesting ideas, but the characters may not be strong enough to keep you interested, writes Emily Wilson from New Scientist - Home https://ift.tt/2UINRTl

How can international travel resume during the coronavirus pandemic?

Much of the world is starting to open up again but would-be travellers in many countries are face a confusing, uncertain and fast-changing situation from New Scientist - Home https://ift.tt/3d4sQZO

Why cracking nuclear fusion will depend on artificial intelligence

The promise of clean, green nuclear fusion has been touted for decades, but the rise of AI means the challenges could finally be overcome from New Scientist - Home https://ift.tt/3faaS9v

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