🎙️ @Science Podcast Hey curious minds! In this episode, we’re diving into some of the wildest and most mind-blowing dis…
🎙️ @Science Podcast
Hey curious minds! In this episode, we’re diving into some of the wildest and most mind-blowing discoveries fresh from the front lines of science. Let’s go!
🌌 What if the universe doesn’t need dark matter or dark energy? Physicist Richard Lieu just proposed a bold new model suggesting cosmic expansion comes from sudden bursts in space-time — shaking the foundations of modern cosmology .
🪐 Meanwhile, the James Webb Space Telescope spotted a dusty disk around the central star of the famous Ring Nebula — likely the remnants of a stellar “marriage” gone dusty .
🌍 Beneath our feet, scientists uncovered a brand-new phylum of microbes deep in Earth’s soil — and these guys are purifying our water while thriving in extreme underground zones .
⚡ Think only sharks and bees can sense electric fields? Nope. Turns out fruit fly larvae have a “sixth sense” too, with special neurons in their heads guiding them like living compasses .
🌊 Out at sea, glowing “milky seas” — massive bioluminescent patches — are becoming more predictable thanks to a new 400-year database. Yes, nature’s glow-in-the-dark ocean is real .
🎣 Up in the mountains of Europe, ancient DNA reveals that as far back as the 7th century, farmers were hauling fish to alpine lakes — early aquaculture in action .
🧠 And finally, a mouse watching The Matrix helped scientists map 84,000 neurons and 500 million synapses in a tiny bit of brain — a neural map so complex, it looks like a galaxy .
🦕 Oh — and right at ground zero of the asteroid that killed the dinosaurs? Life bounced back in just a few years, thanks to a secret hydrothermal system under the sea floor .
📻 Hit play and explore how science is rewriting reality — one discovery at a time.
