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New Scientist

Nov 19 2022
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

All in the mind • Embracing subjectivity in our experience of pain is the path to better treatments

New Scientist

COP27 talks in disarray • Negotiations on key issues are at an impasse as the UN summit enters its second week, reports Madeleine Cuff in Sharm El Sheikh

Analysis Climate finance • Why ‘loss and damage’ payments are now on the agenda Advances in attribution science have made the argument for climate reparations impossible to ignore, says Madeleine Cuff

Crucial Congo forest under threat • The area of forest felled in the Congo basin rose last year, but schemes giving power to Indigenous communities could be key to reversing the trend

Risk of pandemic terrorism • Geneticist Kevin Esvelt says the technology to create a dangerous virus and trigger a pandemic is in a growing number of hands, reports Michael Le Page

Quantum experiment flips time • A photon can be made to appear to run forwards and backwards in time, which could have implications for quantum computing, says Alex Wilkins

US midterm voters had climate change on their minds

Herds of pig-like peccaries vanish and reappear years later

Your perfect movie • Artificial intelligences that turn text into video are making rapid progress, but are we ready for what comes next, asks Alex Wilkins

Row over fingerprint scanners • A new form of surveillance for people subject to deportation orders in the UK has attracted criticism from privacy campaigners, reports Jason Arunn Murugesu

Probiotic coated in nanoparticles may ease bowel disease

Ants have evolved to farm plants on at least 15 separate occasions

Knee ligament injuries can heal without surgery

Gene drive could wipe out mice • Parasitic DNA that spreads through a population and makes females infertile has been shown to work in a mammal for the first time, reports Michael Le Page

AIs are better at answering questions if you get another AI to ask them

Zapping neurons helps people with paralysis to walk

Particles pop up out of empty space in a miniature cosmos

Artificial sleep helps AI learn new task

Testosterone linked with kidney injury

Oldest legible sentence using first alphabet found

Really brief

Bringing maths to life • Relating the subject to questions of politics and social justice can help address its image problem, argues Eugenia Cheng

Wild Wild Life • Eternal sunshine Some bird species fly vast distances to enjoy an almost unlimited summer. We are still learning about how they evolved and how they know where to go, finds Penny Sarchet

Infernal energy

Your letters

Kaleidoscope world • Telluria is a satirical fantasy set in the fragments of a neo-Russian empire, where everyone craves a psychotropic drug, finds Boyd Tonkin

Thor actor’s amazing life hacks

The life spiritual • A meticulous and respectful guide to one of our most intimate areas of life makes for a fascinating read, finds Grace Wade

Don’t miss

The sci-fi column • The strangers we become Nathan Tavares puts a new twist on the multiverse trope in A Fractured Infinity, a coming-of-age novel that reminds us all of the horror of being young, says Sally Adee

Pain

Painful prejudices

Placebo power

Cosmic thoughts • During a...


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Frequency: Weekly Pages: 60 Publisher: New Scientist Ltd Edition: Nov 19 2022

OverDrive Magazine

  • Release date: November 18, 2022

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

All in the mind • Embracing subjectivity in our experience of pain is the path to better treatments

New Scientist

COP27 talks in disarray • Negotiations on key issues are at an impasse as the UN summit enters its second week, reports Madeleine Cuff in Sharm El Sheikh

Analysis Climate finance • Why ‘loss and damage’ payments are now on the agenda Advances in attribution science have made the argument for climate reparations impossible to ignore, says Madeleine Cuff

Crucial Congo forest under threat • The area of forest felled in the Congo basin rose last year, but schemes giving power to Indigenous communities could be key to reversing the trend

Risk of pandemic terrorism • Geneticist Kevin Esvelt says the technology to create a dangerous virus and trigger a pandemic is in a growing number of hands, reports Michael Le Page

Quantum experiment flips time • A photon can be made to appear to run forwards and backwards in time, which could have implications for quantum computing, says Alex Wilkins

US midterm voters had climate change on their minds

Herds of pig-like peccaries vanish and reappear years later

Your perfect movie • Artificial intelligences that turn text into video are making rapid progress, but are we ready for what comes next, asks Alex Wilkins

Row over fingerprint scanners • A new form of surveillance for people subject to deportation orders in the UK has attracted criticism from privacy campaigners, reports Jason Arunn Murugesu

Probiotic coated in nanoparticles may ease bowel disease

Ants have evolved to farm plants on at least 15 separate occasions

Knee ligament injuries can heal without surgery

Gene drive could wipe out mice • Parasitic DNA that spreads through a population and makes females infertile has been shown to work in a mammal for the first time, reports Michael Le Page

AIs are better at answering questions if you get another AI to ask them

Zapping neurons helps people with paralysis to walk

Particles pop up out of empty space in a miniature cosmos

Artificial sleep helps AI learn new task

Testosterone linked with kidney injury

Oldest legible sentence using first alphabet found

Really brief

Bringing maths to life • Relating the subject to questions of politics and social justice can help address its image problem, argues Eugenia Cheng

Wild Wild Life • Eternal sunshine Some bird species fly vast distances to enjoy an almost unlimited summer. We are still learning about how they evolved and how they know where to go, finds Penny Sarchet

Infernal energy

Your letters

Kaleidoscope world • Telluria is a satirical fantasy set in the fragments of a neo-Russian empire, where everyone craves a psychotropic drug, finds Boyd Tonkin

Thor actor’s amazing life hacks

The life spiritual • A meticulous and respectful guide to one of our most intimate areas of life makes for a fascinating read, finds Grace Wade

Don’t miss

The sci-fi column • The strangers we become Nathan Tavares puts a new twist on the multiverse trope in A Fractured Infinity, a coming-of-age novel that reminds us all of the horror of being young, says Sally Adee

Pain

Painful prejudices

Placebo power

Cosmic thoughts • During a...


Expand title description text