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Jhon Harry

This Weirdly Brilliant Telescope Design Might Finally Uncover Earth’s Twin

Finding Earth-like planets is nearly impossible because stars drown them out in brightness. Conventional telescope designs fall short, but a proposed rectangular infrared telescope could solve this. It might reveal dozens of promising worlds within 30 light-years, paving the way to spotting signs of life. Origins of Life and Water’s Role Earth is the only […]

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NASA Detects New Interstellar Visitor to Our Solar System: Could It Be an Alien Probe?

3I/ATLAS is a fast, ancient interstellar object. Its odd features fuel both scientific study and speculation. On July 1, astronomers detected a strange, fast-moving object racing toward the Sun. Named 3I/ATLAS, it stood out for one remarkable reason: its orbit revealed that it had arrived from beyond our Solar System. This marked only the third

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New Eye Drops Sharpen Aging Eyes in Just One Hour

Imagine tossing aside your reading glasses and regaining crisp, youthful vision with just a few drops a day. New research suggests that specially formulated eye drops can significantly improve near vision in people with presbyopia — age-related difficulty focusing on close objects. Patients reported sharper sight within an hour, sustained improvements for up to two

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Deep-Sea Ghost Sharks Grow Teeth on Their Foreheads, and Scientists Finally Know Why

Male “ghost sharks,” eerie deep-sea fish known as chimaeras and closely related to sharks and rays, have a strange rod that projects from their foreheads and is covered with sharp, retractable teeth. New research shows these are not simple imitations but actual rows of teeth that develop outside the mouth. The unusual structure, called a

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NASA’s Webb Observes Immense Stellar Jet on Outskirts of Our Milky Way

A blowtorch of seething gasses erupting from a volcanically growing monster star has been captured by NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope. Stretching across 8 light-years, the length of the stellar eruption is approximately twice the distance between our Sun and the next nearest stars, the Alpha Centauri system. The size and strength of this particular

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Breaking News!! In Japan, Vending Machines Automatically Unlock During Earthquakes to Provide Emergency Supplies”

Japan is widely recognized as a global leader in technological innovation, disaster preparedness, and creative problem-solving. One fascinating example of this intersection of technology and safety is its vending machines, many of which are equipped with seismic sensors that automatically unlock and dispense food and water during major earthquakes. To outsiders, this may sound like

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Stephenson 2-18 vs The Sun: Size Beyond Comprehension

Stephenson 2-18 vs The Sun: Size Beyond Comprehension Introduction When we gaze up at the sky, the Sun appears unimaginably large — a blazing sphere of gas so immense it contains 99.8% of all the mass in our solar system. It gives us warmth, light, and energy, sustaining every form of life on Earth. Yet

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Brian Cox: At the Intersection of Science, Communication, and Public Engagement

Professor Brian Cox, a physicist and science communicator known worldwide, has continued to make waves in 2025 with a blend of public outreach, record-breaking tours, new media ventures, and educational initiatives. As someone who bridges the gap between the esoteric world of particle physics and the general public’s curiosity about the cosmos, Cox remains a

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This 3-million-year-old cave in Vietnam is one of the few unexplored places on Earth linked to the mysterious apparitions of strange, gray

The Myth and Mystery of Vietnam’s Caves: Science, Legends, and the “Gray Apparitions” Deep in the forests of central Vietnam lie majestic cave systems, ancient karst formations, and hidden caverns whose age stretches back millions of years. These subterranean realms have long sparked both scientific interest and local folklore. In recent years, some sensational claims

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Revealing the Final Moments of a Star: New Insights into the Supernova Cassiopeia A

Revealing the Final Moments of a Star: New Insights into the Supernova Cassiopeia A On September 6, 2025, LiveScience published an attention-grabbing report: scientists studying the famous supernova remnant Cassiopeia A (Cas A) have unearthed surprising details about how the star died — details that challenge long-standing assumptions about how massive stars explode. Live Science

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