News Environment

Climate change shifts seasons in Northern Hemisphere

The summer season in Germany could last up to 166 days by the year 2100 if the anthropogenic climate change continues at its current pace.

 News Physics

Artificial Sun Sets Fusion Record

South Korean scientists at the Institute for Fusion Energy have broken the world record for operating a fusion reactor, more than doubling the previous record.

 News Environment

Record Cold Confirmed After 29 Years

A new official record for the coldest temperature on the Northern Hemisphere has been confirmed by the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) after 29 years. The

 News Medicine

High Temperatures Increase SARS-CoV-2 Half-Life

A new study has found that higher temperatures can significantly increase the half-life of infectious SARS-CoV-2 particles. The virus is primarily transmitted through aerosols and

 News Physics

Death Determined by Thermodynamic Model

A new method for determining the time of death in murder investigations could soon replace the imprecise Henssge model. Currently, forensic investigators use the Henssge

 News Geology

Earth’s Temperature at Glacial Maximum

The current average temperature is around 15 degrees Celsius, but during the peak of the last ice age about 20,000 years ago, it was only

 News Physics

Rainbow-Colored Chocolate Without Additives

A new method for determining the time of death in murder investigations could soon replace the imprecise Henssge model. Currently, forensic investigators use the Henssge

 News Chemistry

Efficient Use of Sunlight with Aerogel Collectors

A new breakthrough in solar technology has been made by scientists at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). They have developed a new material that

 News Chemistry

Record-breaking superconductors with lanthanum hydride

Scientists at the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry in Mainz have developed a new superconductor that functions at minus 23 degrees Celsius, breaking the previous

 News Environment

Record Low Temperature on Earth

In 2004, a satellite measured a temperature of minus 98.6 degrees Celsius in the valleys of the East Antarctic polar plateau, setting a new record