The liver breaks down dietary fructose into lipids that are used by cancer cells to boost their growth in mice.
We asked New Scientist writers to pick their favourite sci-fi short story. From H.G. Wells’s The Time Machine to Octavia E.
W ith their hooves crunching over fallen leaves, reindeers dash into white, snowy landscapes—and folklore—as Christmas ...
From a total solar eclipse that captivated our continent to record temperatures that scorched the planet, these were the ...
Author and Catholic convert Lee Edwards, one of the foremost historians of the conservative movement in America, died ...
Phillipe Parreno wants to take visitors to his latest exhibition, Voices at Munich’s Haus Der Kunst, on a journey into the ...
To run a scientific expedition that travels billions of miles, it takes more than great engineers — it takes a great manager ...
"I can't get a scientist to say that Scientific American, the magazine, as so many institutions, have been ideologically captured by this very, very far-left wing to the point where they're ...
The family, split into two factions, turned up in Nevada — a state that offers high confidentiality in legal matters of ...
Berrien Moore III, dean of the College of Atmospheric and Geographic Sciences and the director of the National Weather Center ...
Maher wanted deGrasse Tyson’s reaction to an opinion editorial from Scientific American that was nearly a year old. The editorial’s author, who no longer works for the research magazine ...
In 1928, the Scottish scientist Alexander Fleming noticed a ... more than 6.5 million American women were on the pill, according to author Jonathan Eig in his book, “The Birth of the Pill ...