
How Science Could Help Sue Big Polluters over Climate Change. #AttributionScience #BBCNews
The video explains how attribution science is being leveraged to link specific extreme weather events to human‑driven climate change and to bring that evidence into courtrooms against major fossil‑fuel companies. Researchers compare observed events with counterfactual simulations of a climate without anthropogenic warming, finding that Hurricane‑strength storms are five times more likely, Pakistani floods 25 % more intense, and Mediterranean wildfires ten times more probable. The discipline, rooted in 1990s research, now produces statistically robust probability shifts that can be cited as expert testimony. A landmark case cited in the video involved Peruvian farmer Saul Luciano Yuya suing German utility RWE. Although the suit was dismissed in 2025, the court ruled that, in principle, fossil‑fuel firms can be held liable for their contribution to climate change, marking the first judicial acknowledgment of such responsibility. The ruling establishes a legal foothold for future climate‑damage claims, signaling that corporations may face substantial financial exposure and prompting investors and insurers to reassess climate‑risk models.

The History of Space Science with Maggie Aderin Pocock #shorts #spacescience
The short video traces the early history of space science, spotlighting Galileo Galilei’s pioneering lunar observations and the broader quest to picture the Moon. Using his telescope, Galileo revealed craters and rugged terrain, overturning the prevailing belief that the Moon was...

BREAKTHROUGH CURES By The Thousands: LigandForge Is Here.
The video spotlights three AI‑driven breakthroughs reshaping biomedicine: a tech‑entrepreneur in Australia used publicly available AI tools to design a custom mRNA cancer vaccine that reduced his dog Rosie’s tumor by 75%, researchers identified the circulating protein HMGB1 as a...

Pulmonary Fibrosis, Immune Responses & Guidance Proteins - The Herzog Lab at Yale School of Medicine
The Herzog Lab at Yale School of Medicine is investigating pulmonary fibrosis, a lethal lung disease characterized by progressive scarring that stiffens the organ and shortens life expectancy. Researchers argue that fibrosis results from an ongoing, maladaptive healing response after an...

Babies May Seem Oblivious — but Their Minds Are Actually Hard at Work. #TEDTalks
Babies' seemingly oblivious behavior masks sophisticated risk assessment, as shown in a recent TED Talk. The speaker presents laboratory experiments where one‑year‑olds willingly step off steep drop‑offs, revealing that fear of heights does not appear until months of walking experience...

What Do We Have to Do with Stardust? | DW Documentary
The DW documentary explores how the very atoms that compose our bodies originated in ancient stars, tracing the cosmic journey from interstellar dust to a habitable planet. It explains that the early solar system began as a cloud of hydrogen,...

There Are 20,000 Known Bee Species, but Which Ones Have the Most Buzz? #SecretsOfTheBees
National Geographic’s new documentary series "Secrets of the Bees" premieres on March 31 at 8/7c, streaming on Disney+ and Hulu. The three‑part series explores the world’s 20,000 known bee species, highlighting their roles in pollination and ecosystem health. Produced by...

What Do We Actually Know About Dark Matter?
The video explores the elusive nature of dark matter, explaining that it was coined to account for the mass discrepancy observed in galaxies and larger cosmic structures. It emphasizes that ordinary, luminous matter makes up only a fraction of the...

Dark Matter Does Not Follow Luminous Matter
The video focuses on the Bullet Cluster, a pair of colliding galaxy clusters long touted as the clearest astrophysical evidence for dark matter. By examining X‑ray images of hot plasma and optical data of galaxies, researchers observe a striking spatial...

Hypothyroidism Is Strongly Linked to SIBO
The video highlights a landmark analysis of over 1,800 patients that identified hypothyroidism as the condition most tightly associated with small intestinal bacterial overgrowth (SIBO), surpassing expected risk factors such as acid‑lowering drugs and prior intestinal surgery. Researchers were surprised...

Why Skipping Breakfast Is the Worst Way to Fast | Dr Kristen Knutson | EP#408
In this episode, sleep‑circadian researcher Dr. Kristen Knutson explains why skipping breakfast is the most counterproductive form of intermittent fasting. She argues that the timing of food intake, independent of calories, aligns with our internal clocks and can dramatically affect...

2026 Michael Collins Trophy for Lifetime Achievement: Dr. Farouk El-Baz
Dr. Farouk El‑Baz received the 2026 Michael Collins Trophy for Lifetime Achievement, honoring a career that fused lunar geology, remote sensing, and humanitarian water projects. His early fascination with NASA’s Bellcomm led him to catalog every Apollo lunar photograph, pinpointing...

We Did Not Evolve Alone: The Full Story
The New Scientist video surveys the rich tapestry of extinct human relatives, from Neanderthals and Denisovans to the “Hobbit” Homo floresiensis and the recently unearthed Homo naledi and Dragon Man fossils. It highlights how ancient DNA reveals interbreeding between these groups and modern Homo sapiens,...

This 24-Yr-Old’s Paper Battery Could One Day Power EVs
The video spotlights a 24‑year‑old entrepreneur who has engineered a paper‑based battery that is less than one millimeter thick, fully flexible, and constructed entirely from plant‑derived materials. By extracting cellulose from agricultural waste such as barley husks, the battery’s electrodes...

Inside the Singapore Lab that Turns Paper Into Batteries
The video spotlights a Singapore‑based laboratory pioneering ultra‑thin, paper‑based batteries that can bend, be molded into various shapes, and replace traditional coin cells. Constructed from plant‑derived cellulose, the cells avoid lithium, nickel, and cobalt, offering fire‑resistance, non‑explosive operation, and...

Humanoids Are the Next Frontier in AI and Robotics
Stanford professor Karen Liu argues that humanoid robots constitute the next frontier in artificial intelligence and robotics, offering a physical embodiment designed for human environments. At the university’s Movement Lab, researchers fuse computer graphics, robotics, and biomechanics to uncover principles of...

Why Heliocentrism Was Actually Wrong At First - Terence Tao
The video explains that the heliocentric model, first championed by Copernicus, was not immediately correct; it replaced a millennia‑old geocentric system but retained the assumption of perfect circles. Copernicus offered a simpler circular orbit model, yet it was less accurate than...

Nuclear Mars Mission // Moon Base // ISS Replacements
The video outlines NASA’s sweeping redesign of its post‑ISS exploration strategy, highlighting a shift toward commercial low‑Earth‑orbit habitats, a pause on the lunar Gateway, and an aggressive push toward a Moon base and a nuclear‑powered Mars probe. Key points include the...

Healthspan Vs. Lifespan - Are We Asking the Wrong Question? | Longevity Biomarker Summit Panel
The Longevity Biomarker Summit panel brought together policy leader Tina Woods, Buck Institute CEO Eric Verden, translational scientist Jasmine Smith, and Disney‑affiliated researcher Keith Kido to debate whether the field is asking the wrong question—healthspan versus lifespan. The speakers converged on...

Healey Community Q&A Webinar: March 12, 2026 | CNM-Au8 Expanded Access Update
The Healey Community Q&A webinar on March 12, 2026 featured Dr. Jinsey Andrews presenting interim results from the NIH‑funded CNM‑AU8 expanded access program (EAP) for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). The program targets patients ineligible for traditional clinical trials, offering them...

Healey ALS MyMatch
The Shaun M. Healey and AMG Center for ALS at Massachusetts General Hospital unveiled ALS MyMatch, a precision‑medicine platform designed to overhaul early‑phase clinical trials for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. By integrating a unified screening protocol that evaluates multiple biomarkers and...

Why Should We Care About Space Science with Anu Ojha #shorts #spacescience #scienceshorts
The short video by astrophysicist Anu Ojha uses a simple string‑tether experiment to illustrate the true scale of the Earth‑Moon system and the broader distances of near‑Earth space. By wrapping a string ten times around a globe he represents the average...

Informatics Grand Rounds with Dr. Cindy Cai
Johns Hopkins’ Grand Rounds featured Dr. Cindy Cai, an ophthalmologist‑researcher who uses biomedical informatics to tackle diabetic retinopathy, a leading cause of vision loss in working‑age adults. She outlined how gaps in routine eye‑care—often driven by social determinants of health...

Octopus Under Threat - Searching for Clues Around the Mediterranean | DW Documentary
The DW documentary examines the mounting pressure on Mediterranean octopus populations, spotlighting illegal fishing practices, booming culinary demand, and grassroots conservation efforts. It follows fishers in Croatia, activists from Sea Shepherd, and industry players in Spain to illustrate how a...

Mortality Trends in Gen X & Millennials
The video highlights a new longitudinal study that tracks cause‑of‑death data from 1979 through 2023, revealing that people born between 1970 and 1985 – the tail end of Generation X and the early Millennials – are experiencing higher mortality rates...

Will Humans In 10,000 Years Still Look Like Us
The video asks whether humans a ten millennia from now will still resemble us, noting that on a static Earth with limited tech, evolution would be too slow to produce noticeable change. It argues that humanity’s expansion across the Solar System...

How We See 1,000 Images of the Same Galaxy | Priya Natarajan
In a recent Closer to Truth interview, astrophysicist Priya Natarajan explains how massive galaxy clusters act as natural telescopes, producing thousands of duplicated images of a single background galaxy through gravitational lensing. She describes Einstein’s general‑relativity picture of spacetime as a...

These Drones Are Flying Into Storms to Fix a Dangerous Problem | WSJ Tech Behind
The Wall Street Journal piece spotlights a new generation of unmanned aerial vehicles deployed by the National Severe Storms Laboratory to gather atmospheric measurements inside severe storms. Traditional observations rely on surface stations, satellites, and weather balloons, but large gaps...

Why "Mirror Cells" Could Reset Life on Earth
The video dramatizes a sci‑fi mission where "mirrored" agents infiltrate a body‑like corporation, using the concept of molecular chirality to illustrate a potential bio‑threat. It explains that most biomolecules exist in a single handedness—left‑handed (L) forms—while their mirror images (D)...

How Genebanks Helped Transform Chickpea Farming in India
The video highlights how gene banks, particularly the International Crops Research Institute for the Semi‑Arid Tropics (ICRISAT), have reshaped chickpea farming in India by delivering new, short‑duration varieties equipped with disease resistance. By tapping into native Indian germplasm, researchers introduced...

Editors' Picks: NASA Shifts Artemis From Gateway Station To Moon Base
The Editors’ Picks segment reports a major shift in NASA’s Artemis program: instead of building the Gateway orbital station as a staging point, the agency will now focus on establishing a permanent surface base at the Moon’s South Pole. The...

How Europe Will Power the Journey to the Moon and Back
Artemis II, NASA’s first crewed mission beyond low‑Earth orbit since Apollo, will loop around the Moon and return safely. The European Service Module (ESM) will power the spacecraft, providing propulsion, electricity and life‑support for the three‑week voyage. Built by ESA, the...

"We Don't Want to Get Scooped" On Going to the Moon, Says Dr. Asha M. George at Space Science Week
Dr. Asha M. George, representing a bipartisan commission on biodefense at the Atlantic Council, addressed the National Academies of Sciences during Space Science Week. She highlighted the administration’s renewed commitment to return humans to the Moon, framing the decision as...

Age and Longevity
The video frames aging not as an immutable fate but as a biomedical target, spotlighting a new generation of researchers who argue that the aging process can be delayed, halted, or even reversed. It weaves together interviews with leading scientists,...

Oxford Scientist: How Your Brain Reads Ahead without You Even Realising 📚
Oxford researchers have uncovered how the brain reads ahead, processing not only the word currently fixated but also information from words that lie ahead in the line. Using advanced neuroimaging on adult participants, they demonstrated that the visual system extracts...

Modern Physics Is Forcing Us to Rethink Existence | Michelle Thaller: Full Interview
In a candid interview, NASA Goddard astronomer Michelle Thaller explains how modern physics is reshaping our view of existence while demystifying the day‑to‑day life of a professional astronomer. She traces the historical split between "astronomer" and "astrophysicist" and shows that...

Eric Sun | Biological Warfare - Lightning Talk @ Vision Weekend Puerto Rico 2026
In a lightning talk at Vision Weekend Puerto Rico 2026, Eric Sun warned that pathogens have historically been the decisive factor in wars and argued that modern societies remain woefully unprepared for the next biological threat. He cited Napoleon’s Haiti campaign,...

Sidh Sikka | How to Build in Space - Lightning Talk @ Vision Weekend Puerto Rico 2026
In a lightning talk at Vision Weekend Puerto Rico 2026, Sidh Sikka argued that humanity must move beyond launching fully‑formed payloads and hand‑built International Space Station modules to a new paradigm of autonomous construction in orbit. He highlighted two entrenched approaches—fairing‑constrained...

Abel Méndez | A Multi-Scale Search for Extraterrestrial Life in the Radio Universe
Professor Abel Méndez of the University of Puerto Rico outlines a multi‑scale radio program aimed at detecting technosignatures and other transient astronomical events. The initiative, dubbed Arecibo‑W, builds on the legacy of historic SETI efforts—from Jansky’s 1933 discovery to the...

New Hyperspectral Satellites See 'Impossible' Color Details
The video introduces a new generation of hyperspectral imaging satellites that record hundreds of narrow spectral bands for every pixel, moving the technology from secret military use into the commercial arena. Companies such as Planet Labs and Pixel (formerly Two‑X)...

Sugar and Endurance Performance: How Athletes Can Fuel for Speed Without Hurting Long-Term Health
The episode of Fast Talk tackles the perennial dilemma for endurance athletes: how to harness the performance benefits of simple sugars while safeguarding long‑term health. Host Rob Pickles and Dr. Asker Yuken explore the biochemical role of glucose, fructose, and...

UFO/UAP The Mysterious Palomar Transits Update for March 26, 2026
The video reviews the latest findings of the VASCO (Vanishing and Appearing Sources during a Century of Observations) project, focusing on mysterious transient points recorded on mid‑1950s photographic plates from Palomar Observatory. It recounts how the original search identified nine...

Nucleosome Remodelling | Nucleosome Model of Chromosome Csir Net Life Science
The video explains chromatin remodeling, focusing on nucleosome architecture and the epigenetic modifications that govern DNA accessibility. It describes how DNA is wrapped around an octamer of histone proteins, forming nucleosomes that compact the genome while allowing regulated access for...

Nights on Venus, Best Interstellar Propulsion Tech, Sun's Stellar Flybys | Q&A 409
The episode is a rapid‑fire Q&A where the host tackles a range of astrophysical curiosities—from whether Venus truly goes dark at night, to the plausibility of a rogue planet reshaping dwarf‑planet orbits, to the propulsion concepts that could enable interstellar...

NASA Gets HUGE Overhaul, Here's Everything You Need to Know About the "Ignition" Event.
NASA’s "Ignition" event laid out the most sweeping revision of the agency’s roadmap in years, bundling new human‑spaceflight milestones with a suite of robotic and commercial initiatives. The centerpiece is an accelerated Artemis schedule that will push astronauts back to...

NASA’s SkyFall Mars Helicopters
The short video titled “NASA’s SkyFall Mars Helicopters” offers a cinematic preview of NASA’s next‑generation rotorcraft designed to fly in the thin Martian atmosphere. Through a blend of music, mechanical whirring, and the iconic NASA logo, the clip sets a...

This New Science on Visceral Fat Will Change Your Life
The video explains emerging research that visceral abdominal fat is not merely a cosmetic concern but a neurotoxic organ that can shrink brain tissue and impair cognition. Large cohort studies—one in Circulation of 1,200 participants and a UK‑Biobank MRI analysis of...

Methane Is Underreported
The video highlights that methane emissions have been chronically under‑reported for decades, primarily because regulators and companies rely on traditional bottom‑up accounting methods. Those methods tally equipment counts and multiply by generic emission factors, assuming each unit operates within “normal” parameters....

What's Up: April 2026 Skywatching Tips From NASA
NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory released a concise sky‑watching briefing for April 2026, highlighting three celestial events that will be visible to the naked eye or modest equipment: Mercury’s greatest elongation, the Lyrid meteor shower, and Comet C/2025 R3. On April 3, Mercury will...

Will the Gulf Stream Collapse and What Will Happen if It Does?
The video examines whether the Gulf Stream—a critical component of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation—could collapse and what that would mean for global climate. By transporting warm, salty water from the Gulf of Mexico toward Europe, the current moderates temperatures...