3 place 0

552 This hidden state of water could explain why life exists

ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 03/29/2026 09:32 EDT

Scientists have finally found a hidden “critical point” in supercooled water that explains why it behaves so strangely. At this point, two different liquid forms of water merge, triggering powerful fluctuations that affect water even at normal temperatures. The breakthrough was made possible by ultra-fast X-ray lasers that captured water before it froze. This discovery could reshape our understanding of water’s role in nature—and possibly even life itself.

To see detailed statistics for the news please log in »

Read the original

Add your comment
You must be logged in with Facebook to read and write comments.

A newsletter a day!

You may get 10 most important news around midday in daily newsletter. Press the button and we will send you the most important news only, no spam attached.

or register

LIKE us on Facebook so you won't miss the most important news of the day!

News from the same source
ScienceDaily ScienceDaily
Silicon Valley
George Avalos @ Silicon Valley 1 place · 02/07/2106 01:28 EDT

Newark apartment complex bought for much less than prior value

An East Bay apartment complex has been bought at a price that's well below its prior value. Read more

0

🔮
08.05.2026 ♊︎ Today promises to be a busy and interesting day for Geminis, filled with many events... Read more ›
Silicon Valley
George Avalos @ Silicon Valley 2 place · 02/07/2106 01:28 EDT

PG&E buys San Jose building to bolster South Bay operations

A PG&E Corp. unit has bought a San Jose building in a move to bolster the utility's South Bay operations. Read more

0

Inc42 Media
Palak Sharma @ Inc42 Media 1 place · today 23:30 EDT

From Skyroot To Pronto — Indian Startups Raised $132 Mn This Week

The Indian startup ecosystem got its first spacetech unicorn this week. Despite this, the total deal count remained muted with… Read more

0 fresh

Slashdot
BeauHD @ Slashdot 1 place · today 23:30 EDT

NASA Keeps Track As Mexico City Sinks Into the Ground

An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Guardian: Walking into Mexico City's sprawling central Zocalo is a dizzying experience. At one end of the plaza, the capital's cathedral, with its soaring spires, slumps in one direction. An attached church, known as the Metropolitan Sanctuary, tilts in the other. The nearby National Palace also seems off-kilter. The teetering of many of the capital's historic buildings is the most visible sign... Read more

0 fresh

Inc42 Media
Debarghya Sil @ Inc42 Media 2 place · today 22:30 EDT

How Euler Motors Zoomed In On Electric Cargo, Laid Out Its Growth Blueprint

Some Indian cities are often found more choking than any other place in the world. The air quality breaches the… Read more

0 fresh

SlashGear
SlashGear 1 place · today 22:30 EDT

15 Of The Coolest Nissan Concept Models We Wish Made It To Production

Nissan has had its share of concept models left on the cutting room floor. These are 15 of the coolest we wished made it to production. Read more

0 fresh

Silicon Canals
Editorial team @ Silicon Canals 1 place · today 22:18 EDT

The person who insists on driving themselves to every gathering instead of accepting a lift isn’t always being independent, they may have learned that needing a ride home meant being on someone else’s clock and mood

For many adults, the refusal to accept a lift isn't about preference or self-sufficiency. It's the grown-up version of a childhood lesson: being in someone else's car meant being on someone else's clock and someone else's mood. Read more

0 fresh

Silicon Canals
Editorial team @ Silicon Canals 2 place · today 22:17 EDT

There’s a specific kind of relief that belongs to people who finally cancelled the plan they had been dreading for two weeks, and it isn’t laziness, it’s the first taste of a no that didn’t have to be earned with an excuse

The relief that follows cancelling a dreaded plan isn't laziness or avoidance. It's often the first time someone says no without paying for it with an excuse, and the size of the relief tells you exactly how misaligned the original yes was. Read more

0 fresh

GSMArena.com
GSMArena.com 1 place · today 22:01 EDT

More Honor Magic9 Pro Max specs leak

Back in April the first details about the upcoming Honor Magic9 Pro Max got outed, and today a new source out of China brings us even more details about this phone. The device is said to sport a 6.8" to 6.89" LTPO OLED screen with "1.5K" resolution and 2.5D curved glass, a 200MP main camera using a 1/1.28" type sensor, a 200MP periscope telephoto camera, an ultrasonic fingerprint sensor, 3D... Read more

0 fresh

Mashable
Mashable 1 place · today 22:00 EDT

NYT Strands hints, answers for May 9, 2026

The NYT Strands hints and answers you need to make the most of your puzzling experience. Read more

0 fresh

Mashable
Mashable 2 place · today 22:00 EDT

NYT Connections hints today: Clues, answers for May 9, 2026

Connections is a New York Times word game that's all about finding the "common threads between words." How to solve the puzzle. Read more

0 fresh

Mashable
Mashable 3 place · today 22:00 EDT

Wordle today: Answer, hints for May 9, 2026

Here's the answer for "Wordle" #1785 on May 9 as well as a few hints, tips, and clues to help you solve it yourself. Read more

0 fresh

SlashGear
SlashGear 2 place · today 21:45 EDT

Here's When Renting A Pressure Washer Makes More Sense Than Owning

A pressure washer can make outdoor cleaning faster, but owning one isn't always practical. These factors can help you decide when to rent instead. Read more

0 fresh

TechRadar
TechRadar 1 place · today 21:00 EDT

I spent weeks testing the TCL QM8L TV, and I'm a believer in its new SQD mini-LED technology — this is a stunning TV for a great price, with just a couple of notable quirks

The TCL QM8L Series is an impressive TV in person with Google Gemini-powered hands-free control and a bright screen. Cinephiles might take issue with its less-than-accurate colors. Read more

0 fresh

Digital Trends
Manisha Priyadarshini @ Digital Trends 1 place · today 21:00 EDT

This Tom Hanks WWII thriller is one of 3 best movies on Apple TV to watch this weekend (May 8-10)

Apple TV is home to three great movies this weekend, including one led by Tom Hanks' self-written WWII thriller. Read more

0 fresh

Digital Trends
Manisha Priyadarshini @ Digital Trends 2 place · today 21:00 EDT

This Oscar-nominated revenge thriller is one of the 3 best Peacock movies you should watch this weekend (May 8-10)

From an Academy Award-winning revenge thriller to a Korean crime hit, Peacock has three underrated films worth watching this weekend. Read more

0 fresh

Habr
AsciiMoth @ Habr 1 place · today 20:46 EDT

Yggdrasil как встраиваемая библиотека

Yggdrasil - это экспериментальная оверлейная IPv6 mesh-сеть, уже неоднократно обсуждавшаяся на хабре. Под катом рассматриваем ее использование в качестве встраиваемой библиотеки в вашем go приложении. Читать далее Read more

0 fresh

SlashGear
SlashGear 3 place · today 20:30 EDT

These 5 SUVs Are More Reliable Than The Honda CR-V

Honda is a brand that looms large in discussions of reliability, but if you're shopping for an SUV, there are more reliable options than the current CR-V. Read more

0 fresh

Business Insider
Ariba Mobin @ Business Insider 1 place · today 20:18 EDT

My mom saw strengths where others saw hobbies. I parent the same way now.

I excelled in biology, but it wasn't my passion. I eventually fell into a career my mom knew I was suited for all along. Read more

0 fresh

The most popular news from the same source for the last week
ScienceDaily ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 05/02/2026 07:35 EDT

Free-living amoebae are emerging as a global health concern, fueled by warming temperatures and outdated water systems. While many are harmless, some can cause deadly infections and even protect other dangerous microbes. Their ability to survive heat and disinfectants makes them especially hard to control. Scientists say improved surveillance and water treatment are urgently needed. Read more

0

ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 05/02/2026 08:47 EDT

Two of the most dangerous fault systems on the U.S. West Coast may be more connected than scientists once thought. New research suggests the Cascadia subduction zone and the San Andreas fault can “sync up,” triggering earthquakes within minutes or hours of each other. This rare “synchronization” could dramatically increase the scale of a major West Coast disaster. Instead of one massive quake, multiple regions could be hit at nearly... Read more

0

ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily 3 place · 05/02/2026 08:57 EDT

Scientists have discovered a way to help the brain clean itself of harmful Alzheimer’s plaques by activating its own support cells. By increasing a protein called Sox9, researchers were able to boost the activity of astrocytes, star shaped cells that help maintain brain health. In mice that already showed memory problems, this approach reduced plaque buildup and preserved cognitive function over time. Read more

0

ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily 2 place · 05/02/2026 09:27 EDT

A centuries-old vision of a mechanical volcano has finally erupted into reality, as two University of Melbourne engineering students recreated a design first imagined in 1775 by volcanology enthusiast Sir William Hamilton. Drawing from an 18th-century watercolor and a preserved sketch, they used modern tools like LED lighting and electronic systems to simulate the glowing flows and explosive drama of Mount Vesuvius. Read more

0

ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 05/02/2026 09:56 EDT

Crabs’ famous sideways walk may trace back to a single evolutionary moment 200 million years ago. Researchers found that most modern crabs inherited this trait from one ancestor—and never looked back. The movement likely gave them an edge, helping them dodge predators with quick, unpredictable bursts. It’s a rare example of a behavior evolving once and then dominating an entire group. Read more

0

ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 05/02/2026 23:12 EDT

A bizarre rainforest insect is rewriting what scientists thought they knew about camouflage. A katydid spotted glowing hot pink in Panama stunned researchers when it slowly transformed into green in just 11 days, perfectly mirroring the life cycle of tropical leaves that emerge pink before maturing. What once seemed like a rare genetic oddity now appears to be a clever survival trick, allowing the insect to blend in as its... Read more

0

ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 05/03/2026 00:56 EDT

Astronomers have unleashed a powerful new AI tool called RAVEN to comb through data from NASA’s TESS mission—and it’s paying off in a big way. By analyzing millions of stars, the system has confirmed over 100 exoplanets, including 31 brand-new worlds, and identified thousands more promising candidates. What makes this especially exciting is the discovery of rare and extreme planets, like those that whip around their stars in less than... Read more

0

ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 05/03/2026 03:08 EDT

A new kind of memory device may finally solve the problem of overheating and battery drain in electronics. By shrinking components to an extreme scale and redesigning their structure, researchers found a way to reduce energy loss instead of increasing it. The result is a tiny memory unit that improves as it gets smaller—something once thought impossible. This could pave the way for ultra-efficient smartphones, wearables, and AI systems. Read more

0

ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 05/03/2026 07:47 EDT

A new analysis of the “Boltzmann brain” paradox suggests our memories and sense of reality could, in theory, be random illusions born from cosmic chaos. By uncovering circular reasoning in how physicists think about time and entropy, the study raises fresh doubts about what we can truly know about the past. Read more

0

ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 05/03/2026 08:50 EDT

The brain’s memory center may begin life more like a crowded web than an empty canvas. Researchers discovered that early neural networks in the hippocampus are dense and seemingly random, then become more organized by shedding connections over time. This pruning process creates a faster, more efficient system for linking experiences and forming memories. It challenges the idea that the brain starts from scratch. Read more

0

Most popular sources

  • You see 767 news out of 767.
  • Sources 61 out of 61.
CoinDesk 0%
Tech Wire Asia 0%
Sifted 0%
EU-Startups 0%
UK Tech News 0%
View sources »

LIKE us on Facebook so you won't miss the most important news of the day!

08.05.2026 23:55
Last update: 23:50 EDT.
News rating updated: 06:50.

What is Times42?

Times42 brings you the most popular news from tech news portals in real-time chart.
Read about us in FAQ section.


Times42 © 2026