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Kids may be more likely to get the new ‘Cicada’ variant of Covid-19, scientists say. Here’s what to know about BA.3.202.04.2026A heavily mutated variant of the virus that causes Covid-19 appears to be affecting primarily children, scientists say, though it’s not causing more severe disease – in kids or in adults.
These 45 exoplanets may be the best places to search for alien life26.03.2026A new catalog of potentially habitable exoplanets provides the framework for future observations in the search for alien life.
Astrophotographer captures spectacular photo of Antennae Galaxies dueling in deep space28.03.2026The Antennae galaxies are witnessed in the process of merging into a single elliptical galaxy.
Smartwatches: Remain Associated and Dynamic06.06.2024Smartwatches are presently fundamental, consolidating wellness following, correspondence, and savvy highlights on your wrist. Whether you want progressed wellbeing checking,
Nuno Loureiro, MIT physicist, fatally shot at home; police investigate17.12.2025Nuno Loureiro, a 47-year-old physicist and fusion scientist, was shot Monday night at his home in Brookline, Massachusetts.
Bring tissues and skip the mascara: The movie that's making theater-goers sob uncontrollaby16.12.2025The people who paid to be emotionally destroyed by a movie about the death of Shakespeare's son tell us about the joy of communal devastation.
Warming winters lead to more nitrate pollution in the drinking water near farms01.04.2026When pollution gets bad enough in the rivers supplying Iowa's largest city with drinking water, it costs Des Moines around $16,000 a day to run a special system to filter out dangerous nitrates. It’s a fact of life in the agriculture-dependent state — and climate change is making the water quality problem even worse. The nitrates come from fertilizer and pesticides that make their way into the soil and then waterways like the Raccoon and Des Moines rivers.
How a Middle East War Becomes a Retail Price Hike26.03.2026Next and H&M are warning that if the Middle East conflict drags on, today’s freight headache could become tomorrow’s consumer squeeze.














