Bharat Innovates 2026 National Basecamp Showcases India’s Most Promising Deep-Tech Ventures
2025-12-19
The Bharat Innovates 2026 National Basecamp was formally inaugurated today at the Indian Institute of Technology Gandhinagar (IITGN), marking a significant milestone in India’s efforts to identify, strengthen, and globally position its most promising deep-tech innovations. The three-day National Basecamp, taking place from December 18 to 20, 2025, brings together approximately 400 shortlisted startups and research-led innovations that have been selected through a rigorous, multi-stage national screening process. The shortlisted startups and innovators are some of India’s brightest and most impactful, with the potential to ...
Here’s what determines whether your income level rises or falls
2025-12-19
Economists call it “income mobility”. This means how easy or difficult it is for you or your family to go up or down in income compared to others in the community around you.
People in Norway have a high level of income mobility. It is quite possible for people to increase their incomes. But also for those incomes to drop.
“Your income is the sum of what you earn from work and from capital income,” says Professor Roberto Iacono at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology's ...
SCIE indexation achievement: Celebrate with Space: Science & Technology
2025-12-19
On December 8, 2025, Space: Science & Technology was officially indexed in the Web of Science: Science Citation Index Expanded (SCIE). All articles published since 2021 will be progressively included into the SCIE database.
The editorial team would love to extend our heartfelt gratitude to the hosts of the journal: Beijing Institute of Technology and the China Academy of Space Technology, as well as to Editor-in-Chief Prof. YE Peijian, member of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, the entire Editorial Board, all authors and reviewers for their invaluable contributions. We also sincerely thank all ...
Children’s Hospital Colorado performs region’s first pediatric heart and liver dual organ transplant
2025-12-19
AURORA, Colo. (Dec. 19, 2025) – Children’s Hospital Colorado (Children’s Colorado) successfully performed the hospital’s first-ever heart and liver dual organ transplant, with support from dozens of team members across 25 different multidisciplinary care teams. Only 38 other pediatric heart and liver dual organ transplants have been completed in the United States.
“Performing Children’s Colorado’s first-ever heart and liver dual organ transplant is an amazing accomplishment for our Pediatric Transplant Program,” said Dr. Megan Adams, surgical director of the Pediatric Liver Transplant and Kidney Transplant Programs. ...
Australian team discover why quantum computers have memory problems over time
2025-12-19
A team of Australian and international scientists has, for the first time, created a full picture of how errors unfold over time inside a quantum computer — a breakthrough that could help make future quantum machines far more reliable.
The researchers, led by Macquarie University’s Dr Christina Giarmatzi, found that the tiny errors that plague quantum computers don’t just appear randomly. Instead, they can linger, evolve and even link together across different moments in time.
“We can think of it as quantum computers retaining memory of the errors, which ...
What determines the fate of a T cell?
2025-12-19
Researchers at the Max Delbrück Center have found that a cellular housekeeping mechanism called autophagy plays a major role in ensuring that T stem cells undergo normal cell division. The findings, published in “Nature Cell Biology,” could help boost vaccine response in older adults.
When killer T cells of our immune system divide, they normally undergo asymmetric cell division (ACD): Each daughter cell inherits different cellular components, which drive the cells toward divergent fates – one cell becomes a ...
Candida auris: genetic process revealed which could be treatment target for deadly fungal disease
2025-12-19
Scientists have discovered a genetic process which could unlock new ways to treat mysterious and deadly fungal infection which has shut down multiple hospital intensive care units.
Candida auris is particularly dangerous for people who are critically ill, so hospitals are vulnerable. While it seems to live harmlessly on the skin of increasing numbers of people, patients on ventilators are at high risk. Once infected, the disease has a death rate of 45 per cent, and can resist all major classes of antifungal drugs, making it extremely difficult to treat and eradicate from wards, once patients are infected.
The disease was only detected in 2008, and its origins remain ...
Groundbreaking discovery turns household plastic recycling into anti-cancer medication
2025-12-19
A groundbreaking discovery led by the University of St Andrews has found a way to turn ordinary household plastic waste into the building block for anti-cancer drugs.
Household PET (polyethylene terephthalate) waste, such as plastic bottles and textiles, can be recycled in two main ways: mechanically or chemically. Chemical recycling breaks down PET’s long polymer chains into individual units called monomers or into other valuable chemicals.
Published today (Thursday 18 December) ...
Blocking a key inflammatory pathway improves liver structure and vascular function in cirrhosis, study finds
2025-12-19
Researchers from Miguel Hernández University of Elche (UMH) in Spain have identified an effective strategy to reduce structural liver damage and improve hepatic vascular function in cirrhosis. The study, published in Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy, also reveals a key inflammatory mechanism that contributes to liver injury and could be targeted to develop new treatments for a disease responsible for more than one million deaths worldwide each year.
The work was led by Rubén Francés ...
Continuous spread: Raccoon roundworm detected in nine European countries
2025-12-19
FRANKFURT. While the spread of raccoons in Europe is often discussed, their companion tends to remain unnoticed: The raccoon roundworm Baylisascaris procyonis arrived in Europe at the beginning of the 20th century with the first raccoons from North America. Since their release or escape from fur farms, raccoons have spread uncontrollably across large parts of Central Europe – and their parasite with them. Germany is now considered the main distribution area for both species in Europe.
Dangerous ...
HKUST Engineering researchers developed a novel photodetector to enhance the performance of on-chip light monitoring
2025-12-19
Programmable photonics promise faster and more energy-efficient computing than traditional electronics by using light to transmit signals. However, current systems are limited by the need for precise on-chip power monitors. Researchers from the School of Engineering at The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST) have developed a germanium-ion-implanted silicon waveguide photodiode. This novel photodetector achieves high responsivity, ultra-low optical loss, and minimal dark current, significantly enhancing the performance of on-chip light monitoring. It provides core ...
Strategic river sensors could have forewarned of Texas Camp flood disaster
2025-12-19
NEW ORLEANS — Camp Mystic in Texas flooded on July 4, killing 27 people, including 25 children. Over 200 millimeters (over seven inches) of rain fell over the area in 12 hours, and the Guadalupe River rose nearly 8 meters (26 feet) in just 45 minutes. New research recreated the flood conditions and found multiple spots upstream where local communities could have placed water level monitors to give early warnings about rising water.
Researchers presented the findings on Thursday, 18 December at AGU25, joining more than 20,000 scientists discussing the latest Earth and space science research.
The flooding of the camp occurred ...
Drone sampling of whale breath reveals first evidence of potentially deadly virus in Arctic
2025-12-19
Drones have been used to successfully collect samples from the exhaled breath - or “blow” - from wild humpback, sperm and fin whales in northern Norway, hailing a new era of non-invasive health monitoring for these marine giants in Arctic regions.
This approach for pathogen screening has confirmed for the first time that a potentially deadly whale virus, known as cetacean morbillivirus, is circulating above the Arctic Circle.
Experts say this new use of drones could support conservation strategies by detecting early emerging threats of the virus, which has been connected to numerous ...
Roman soldiers defending Hadrian’s Wall infected by parasites, study finds
2025-12-19
A new analysis of sewer drains from the Roman fort of Vindolanda, close to Hadrian’s Wall, has shown that the occupants were infected by three types of intestinal parasite – roundworm, whipworm, and Giardia duodenalis.
These parasites are all spread by ineffective sanitation, with contamination of food, drink or hands by human faeces. Roundworms are 20-30cm long and whipworms about 5cm long. Giardia are microscopic protozoan parasites that cause outbreaks of diarrhoea. This is the first evidence for Giardia duodenalis in Roman Britain.
Vindolanda was located near to Hadrian’s wall in northern ...
Pinochet’s prisoners were tormented with music but still found solace in it, a new book reveals
2025-12-19
University of Cambridge media release
Pinochet’s prisoners were tormented with music but still found solace in it, a new book reveals
UNDER STRICT EMBARGO UNTIL 19:01 US (ET) ON THURSDAY 18TH DECEMBER 2025 / 00:01AM (UK TIME ON FRIDAY 19TH DECEMBER 2025
110 years after Augusto Pinochet’s birth, Chile has just elected a new far-right President, José Antonio Kast, who has praised the dictator's legacy. At the same time, a new book exposes the brutal and tender realities of political imprisonment during the dictatorship (1973–1990) through the power of music.
Music and Political ...
Fertility remains high in rural Tanzania despite access to family planning
2025-12-18
URBANA, Ill. – Fertility rates in much of Sub-Saharan Africa remain high, despite declining child mortality and improved access to contraceptives and female education — factors that generally lead to smaller families and improved economic conditions in developing countries. A new study from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign looks at men’s and women’s desired fertility in rural Tanzania, gauging some of the factors that influence how many children they want.
“This conversation ...
AI-assisted device can improve autism care access
2025-12-18
Access to autism evaluations through specialty health care is notorious for long wait times across the United States. In Missouri, many families wait nearly a year for a diagnostic appointment. AI might be a solution to cutting the wait, according to researchers from the University of Missouri School of Medicine.
Lead author Kristin Sohl and her team partnered with Cognoa, Inc. to test their FDA-approved medical device, CanvasDx, for primary care clinicians in areas without autism care. It incorporates AI algorithms into patient data and makes a prediction of a positive or negative ...
Kinetic careers
2025-12-18
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — Science can be as dynamic as the researchers who explore it. The Society of Asian Scientists and Engineers is recognizing three Sandia National Laboratories engineers who pushed beyond the boundaries of linear research to expand their knowledge and impact across multiple fields.
Mechanical engineer Anton Sumali earned an SASE Career Achievement Award, chemist and nanoengineer Bishnu Khanal received an SASE Professional Achievement Award and transportation systems engineer Esther Woon Lyn John was honored with an SASE Promising Professional Achievement Award.
Each has a unique journey but with ...
Uncovering how parasitic plants avoid attacking themselves to improve crop resistance
2025-12-18
Ikoma, Japan—Parasitic plants are notorious agricultural pests that drain nutrients from crops and cause economic losses of more than USD 1 billion due to yield losses every year. Yet these plants almost never attack themselves or closely related plants. Scientists have long suspected that parasitic plants can recognize “kin,” but the molecular basis for this self-protection has remained unclear.
Now, a team of researchers at the Nara Institute of Science and Technology (NAIST) in Japan has uncovered the mechanism that allows parasitic plants to distinguish self from non-self. Their findings, ...
Nanoparticle vaccine strategy could protect against Ebola and other deadly filoviruses
2025-12-18
LA JOLLA, CA — Filoviruses get their name from the Latin word “filum,” meaning thread—a reference to their long, filamentous shape. This virus family contains some of the most dangerous pathogens known to science, including Ebola, Sudan, Bundibugyo and Marburg viruses. One reason these viruses remain so deadly is the instability of their surface proteins, which makes them difficult for our immune systems to detect and challenging for researchers to target with treatments or vaccines.
Now, a Nature Communications study (currently an Article-in-Press) from Scripps Research scientists published on December 12, 2025, describes new vaccine candidates designed to protect ...
Study finds brain care score can predict risk of stroke across racial groups
2025-12-18
A new study from Mass General Brigham found the Brain Care Score (BCS) is a strong predictor of stroke across different racial groups in the U.S. The findings, published in Neurology, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology, suggest that improvements in the BCS could have particularly meaningful benefits for stroke prevention among Black individuals.
“Black adults in the United States face a two- to threefold higher risk of stroke compared to white adults,” said senior author Sanjula Dhillon Singh, MD, PhD, MS, a principal investigator in the Brain Care Labs within the Mass General Brigham Department of Neurology. “Our findings ...
Key lung immune cells can intensify allergic reactions
2025-12-18
Alveolar macrophages are immune cells that live in the tiny air sacs of the lungs. Under normal conditions, these cells act as guardians, keeping the lungs healthy, supporting breathing, and preventing unnecessary immune responses.
However, new work led by Prof. Bart Lambrecht and Prof. Martin Guilliams (both VIB-UGent Center for Inflammation Research) shows that during allergic reactions, these macrophages can undergo a dramatic change. Instead of calming the immune system, they switch into an inflammatory mode that actively fuels allergy-driven lung inflammation.
“Alveolar macrophages have long been seen as peacekeepers in the lung,” ...
Do hormones explain why women experience more gut pain?
2025-12-18
Women are dramatically more likely than men to suffer from irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), a chronic condition causing abdominal pain, bloating, and digestive discomfort. Now, scientists at UC San Francisco have discovered why.
Estrogen, the researchers report in Science, activates previously unknown pathways in the colon that can trigger pain and make the female gut more sensitive to certain foods and their breakdown products. When male mice were given estrogen to mimic the levels found in females, their gut pain sensitivity increased to match that of females.
The findings not only explain the female predominance ...
New materials conduct ions in solids as easily as in liquids
2025-12-18
Scientists have created a new family of organic materials that stay conductive in the solid state.
The new materials conduct ions equally well as liquids, liquid crystals, and solids, with no steep decrease in ion movement when the salt solidifies.
The team’s discovery overturns a long-standing limitation in electrochemistry: that freezing or crystallizing a liquid inevitably slows ion movement.
The findings have been published today (18/12/25) in Science.
Normally, when liquids solidify, their molecules become locked in place, making it much harder for ions to move and leading to a steep decrease in ionic conductivity. Now, scientists ...
Breakthrough of the Year: Renewable energy begins to eclipse fossil fuel-based sources
2025-12-18
Science has named the seemingly unstoppable growth of renewable energy worldwide as the 2025 Breakthrough of the Year. Since the Industrial Revolution, humanity has relied on fossil fuels like coal, oil, and gas for energy. Carbon emissions from these finite resources have greatly contributed to accelerated climate warming. However, 2025 marked a significant shift in this paradigm as renewable energy generated from the Sun and wind began to surpass conventional fossil fuel-based energy production in several domains. This year, global renewable energy, led ...
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