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New Scientist

Mar 04 2023
Magazine

New Scientist covers the latest developments in science and technology that will impact your world. New Scientist employs and commissions the best writers in their fields from all over the world. Our editorial team provide cutting-edge news, award-winning features and reports, written in concise and clear language that puts discoveries and advances in the context of everyday life today and in the future.

Elsewhere on New Scientist

Into the spotlight • Long-neglected chronic conditions are finally getting the attention they need

New Scientist

A heavenly light show

Why cholera is on the rise globally • More than 1 billion people across 43 countries are at risk of the bacterial infection, which can lead to severe dehydration and death in some cases, writes Jason Arunn Murugesu

‘Forever chemicals’ targeted by US military with extreme water

Stripy wind turbines could reduce fatal seabird collisions

River Oder could be heading for repeat of 2022 ecological disaster

Video games have been getting perspective wrong

Voyage into the unknown • Giant research vessel Falkor (too) is setting off on a mission to seek hydrothermal vents and undiscovered life forms along the mid-Atlantic ridge, reports Ashley Balzer Vigil

Single injection protects babies against RSV

Rethinking chronic conditions • Long covid has shone a spotlight on the role of viruses in other conditions, like chronic fatigue syndrome, reports Michael Marshall

Google hails another step towards a truly useful quantum computer

Artificial islands could let Maldives adapt to rising seas

JWST spots unusually large and young galaxies

HIIT seems safe and boosts fitness after a heart attack

Immune response links rheumatoid arthritis flare-ups with gum disease

Elephants may remember relatives by smell for 12 years

Some of the first humans in Europe used bows and arrows

Fasting for a day may weaken the immune system

New drug may ease endometriosis

Turn kombucha mat into a circuit board

How forest-killing beetle sniffs out its tree victims

Really brief

Drying up • Human ingenuity can’t engineer a solution to a water crisis that has reduced the Colorado river to a trickle, argues Natalie Koch

Field notes from space-time • The importance of uncertainty Quantum mechanics had a disordered beginning and is still developing today. Science is rarely a done deal, says Chanda Prescod-Weinstein

Top shots

Your letters

Reason and belief • Some argue that science and religion have always been separate and at war, but an eye-opening book reveals intertwined histories, finds Joshua Howgego

Freezing the future • Why do people want to be frozen after death? Could it get in the way of living? Sandrine Ceurstemont listens to a new podcast

Don’t miss

Where are we now? • An ambitious, weighty book tracks our complex relationship with Earth’s climate. But more analysis would have been good, says Michael Marshall

Another level of weirdness • We have glimpsed an even stranger version of quantum theory. Now it is time to put it to the test, says physicist Ciarán Gilligan-Lee

The baby dilemma • Whether or not you have children can have a big impact on your health and happiness, and on the planet too. Can science help guide your decision, asks Abigail Beall

WHAT’S THE MAGIC NUMBER?

Rising waters • Lakes across the world are experiencing record-breaking levels of water rise, threatening animals and displacing people. It is a dangerous trend with a clear culprit, finds Graham Lawton

All light on the night • Light pollution is an issue for astronomers, but you can limit your contribution – and find a dark spot near...


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Frequency: Weekly Pages: 60 Publisher: New Scientist Ltd Edition: Mar 04 2023

OverDrive Magazine

  • Release date: March 3, 2023

Formats

OverDrive Magazine

subjects

Science

Languages

English

New Scientist covers the latest developments in science and technology that will impact your world. New Scientist employs and commissions the best writers in their fields from all over the world. Our editorial team provide cutting-edge news, award-winning features and reports, written in concise and clear language that puts discoveries and advances in the context of everyday life today and in the future.

Elsewhere on New Scientist

Into the spotlight • Long-neglected chronic conditions are finally getting the attention they need

New Scientist

A heavenly light show

Why cholera is on the rise globally • More than 1 billion people across 43 countries are at risk of the bacterial infection, which can lead to severe dehydration and death in some cases, writes Jason Arunn Murugesu

‘Forever chemicals’ targeted by US military with extreme water

Stripy wind turbines could reduce fatal seabird collisions

River Oder could be heading for repeat of 2022 ecological disaster

Video games have been getting perspective wrong

Voyage into the unknown • Giant research vessel Falkor (too) is setting off on a mission to seek hydrothermal vents and undiscovered life forms along the mid-Atlantic ridge, reports Ashley Balzer Vigil

Single injection protects babies against RSV

Rethinking chronic conditions • Long covid has shone a spotlight on the role of viruses in other conditions, like chronic fatigue syndrome, reports Michael Marshall

Google hails another step towards a truly useful quantum computer

Artificial islands could let Maldives adapt to rising seas

JWST spots unusually large and young galaxies

HIIT seems safe and boosts fitness after a heart attack

Immune response links rheumatoid arthritis flare-ups with gum disease

Elephants may remember relatives by smell for 12 years

Some of the first humans in Europe used bows and arrows

Fasting for a day may weaken the immune system

New drug may ease endometriosis

Turn kombucha mat into a circuit board

How forest-killing beetle sniffs out its tree victims

Really brief

Drying up • Human ingenuity can’t engineer a solution to a water crisis that has reduced the Colorado river to a trickle, argues Natalie Koch

Field notes from space-time • The importance of uncertainty Quantum mechanics had a disordered beginning and is still developing today. Science is rarely a done deal, says Chanda Prescod-Weinstein

Top shots

Your letters

Reason and belief • Some argue that science and religion have always been separate and at war, but an eye-opening book reveals intertwined histories, finds Joshua Howgego

Freezing the future • Why do people want to be frozen after death? Could it get in the way of living? Sandrine Ceurstemont listens to a new podcast

Don’t miss

Where are we now? • An ambitious, weighty book tracks our complex relationship with Earth’s climate. But more analysis would have been good, says Michael Marshall

Another level of weirdness • We have glimpsed an even stranger version of quantum theory. Now it is time to put it to the test, says physicist Ciarán Gilligan-Lee

The baby dilemma • Whether or not you have children can have a big impact on your health and happiness, and on the planet too. Can science help guide your decision, asks Abigail Beall

WHAT’S THE MAGIC NUMBER?

Rising waters • Lakes across the world are experiencing record-breaking levels of water rise, threatening animals and displacing people. It is a dangerous trend with a clear culprit, finds Graham Lawton

All light on the night • Light pollution is an issue for astronomers, but you can limit your contribution – and find a dark spot near...


Expand title description text