iSOMBOON/Shutterstock
Accepting that you are envious of someone is the first step to adopting a healthier response.
Perspective view of a lobate scarp on Mercury named Carnegie Rupes, colour-coded according to surface altitude. The crater near the middle is nearly 40 km across.
NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Carnegie Institution of Washington
Mercury has shrunk by7 km. Most of this happened long ago, but now we have evidence that it continues.
The purple-striped Jellyfish (Chrysaora colorata)
Lukas Gojda/Shutterstock
Jellyfish have a reputation to stinging wild swimmers and huge population “blooms”. But it’s a mistake to dismiss these animals as ocean pests.
Hubis/Shutterstocl
There’s a battle over consciousness research – and whether it can be understood purely through science.
Zuzha/Shutterstock
It’s pretty common to see face-like patterns in objects – but this quirk can give us insights into human psychology and evolution.
Brandon May
VR can help responders hone the decision making skills they’ll need in emergency scenarios.
A pampas fox.
Foto 4440/Shutterstock
Scientists had thought a ‘dogxim’ was impossible until one was discovered in Brazil
Scharfsinn / Shutterstock
People with disabilities are concerned about breaking down or having accidents when alone in driverless cars.
Insertion of the ALPHA-g apparatus.
Cern
It seems there isn’t a sci-fi part if the universe in which everything is made of antimatter.
LookerStudio/Shutterstock
Liposomes have been used to enhance the effectiveness of medicines for decades – but it doesn’t necessarily mean they will work in food supplements too.
ArtemisDiana / Shutterstock
If we decide that AI helps us think freely, we may need to give it rights too.
Andrii Yalanskyi / Shutterstock
Research shows why people in more diverse communities tend to rely less on negative stereotypes.
Tero Vesalainen / Shutterstock
The online safety bill contains measures that appear to compel messaging services to break encryption.
Many people return lost wallets.
Dobo Kristian/Shutterstock
Ancient religious customs have accelerated the evolutionary process of humans becoming more cooperative.
The blue duck (Hymenolaimus malacorhynchos) is a species endemic to New Zealand.
Graham Martin
Our airspace has only started to become cluttered recently – many birds are struggling to navigate through it.
Nasa/GSFC
Missions to asteroids are opening up the secrets of the Solar System
Amorn Suriyan / Shutterstock
Science works better when barriers to collaboration are removed, say experts.
Alexander Supertramp / Shutterstock
Training AI systems with more focused data sets can target them to a specific use.
Raggedstone / Shutterstock
The space agency hopes to get to the bottom of the many sightings being reported.
ImYanis/Shutterstock
It might seem creepy but digital necromancy is a natural extension of how we grieve in the age of AI.
Rhododendrons look pretty but there is so much more to them.
Richard Milne
Some rhododendron fossils are 60 million years old, showing they were around before the Himalayas were formed.
Shutterstock
Apple has been forced to switch connections in its iPhone after the EU adopted a single standard.
Cornelius Krishna Tedjo/Shutterstock
Ever looked at a familiar face and found it suddenly unusual or unknown? You may have had a case of jamais vu.
Proud Boys leader Henry “Enrique” Tarrio during a rally in Portland, Oregon, on September 26, 2020. He recently faced a trial for his role in the attack on the US Capitol.
AP/Alamy
Experts say remorse can serve as a catalyst for change, forcing us to confront our feelings of guilt and regret.
Zamurovic Brothers/Shutterstock
The fossil record tells conflicting stories about what happened to flowering plants after the asteroid.