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כתבות אחרונות מאתר 'Phys'
Phys

Amazon deforestation is falling, but progress is stalling‎

In 2025, the area deforested in the country fell below 1 million hectares in a year for the first time since 2019. A total of 984,794 hectares of native vegetation were cleared during 2025, a reduction of 20.6% compared with 2024.

20:07
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Phys

Why animal calls sound alike in time: Most species share a common communication tempo‎

From insects to great apes, by way of birds and fish, animals communicate through an extraordinary variety of sounds. While the pitch or timbre of their vocalizations matters, rhythm may play a more fundamental role. Scientists from the University of Geneva (UNIGE), the NCCR Evolving Language, the reConnect Institute and the Institut Pasteur analyzed more than 2,000 sound recordings produced by 98 animal species. All of them vocalize at a strikingly similar rate—roughly two to three acoustic events per second—regardless of their size, habitat, species or social complexity. This constraint is likely linked to the brain's capacity to process auditory stimuli, and human language is no exception. The findings are published in PLOS Biology.

20:07
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Phys

Ocean glow meets 3D printing with living gels that sense mechanical force‎

The integration of biological organisms into synthetic structures offers a radical new pathway for developing intelligent, self-powered materials. Researchers have pioneered an innovative approach to biomanufacturing by using light-based 3D printing to engineer living material systems capable of localized environmental processing.

19:46
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Phys

Municipal governments are often slow to act, except when FIFA comes to town‎

With the 2026 FIFA World Cup kicking off, millions of soccer fans around the world will be following the tournament taking place across 16 host cities in Canada, Mexico and the United States.

19:46
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Phys

Novel nanowire device offers rapid, noninvasive cancer detection‎

A research team in Japan has developed an efficient, minimally invasive cancer detection device that uses high-performance zinc oxide nanowires to selectively capture extracellular vesicles (EVs) from bodily fluids.

19:25
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Phys

Earth's energy imbalance has doubled—here's why that matters‎

Heat waves across Europe and South Asia have dominated the news recently. But these events are really a surface expression of more fundamental changes affecting our planet: Earth itself is accumulating heat faster than ever before.

19:25
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Phys

How a shape-shifting tiny rover inspired by Japanese toys autonomously explored the moon‎

Moon missions come in all shapes and sizes, from car-sized rovers packed with scientific equipment to towering rocket payloads—and now, a small, shape-shifting machine that is about the size of the average palm.

19:05
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Phys

Life after death: From burned trees to bleached corals, how dead organisms live on as the building blocks of new life‎

People's knee-jerk reaction to seeing death in nature is often not positive. The burn scar left by wildfire on a once-forested hillside, or a ghostly white coral reef, may evoke tragedy and despair. But in nature, most plants and animals are recycled into new life.

19:05
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Phys

Why shame is an evolution-based defense mechanism‎

It is unpleasant, strange and often comes as a surprise: shame. But why do we feel it? An international study has shed new light on the emotion of shame, which has long been considered harmful. The conclusion: Shame is not merely an inconvenient feeling, but may fulfill an important function. As an evolution-based protective mechanism, it can help us protect our social reputation.

18:44
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Phys

Private space tourism is taking off—but laws on outer space are from another era‎

Private commercial operators are launching more rockets into space, carrying more people and pursuing more ambitious missions than ever before.

18:44
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