A quiet mind finds a voice in CLIS

In the quiet world of completely locked-in state, the body becomes a sealed chamber and the mind longs for a conversation it can no longer physically initiate. ALS can strip away not just speech or movement but the very channels through which a person can reach out to others. At The University of Texas at…

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Are Wormhole Throats Really Stable in Our Universe?

Wormholes have always hovered between science and myth—the imagined tunnels through spacetime that could, in principle, connect distant regions of the cosmos. A new study from the University of Texas at Dallas, led by Travis Rippentrop, Avijit Bera, and Mustapha Ishak, digs into a pressing question behind that science-fiction gloss: can these thin-walled bridges stay…

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Do magnetized quark stars stay cool inside forever?

The interiors of the universe’s most extreme objects are like laboratories carved out of the imagination. In magnetars—compact stars with magnetic fields so intense they bend the rules of everyday physics—the matter inside can reach densities and field strengths that push our theories to the limit. A new study from Arizona State University asks a…

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When trees map city heat what we learn

Cities are heating up in the same way a city budget can suddenly swell when unforeseen costs pop up. The urban heat island effect is not just a meteorology term to throw around in a climate lecture; it is a lived reality for millions who step outside and feel the heat, especially in streets paved…

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Rydberg Atoms Map Electron Beams in Real Time

The most powerful beams in science come with their own critics—their interactions with the world can ruin sensitive measurements. So researchers have long sought ways to study charged particle beams without tipping the scales. A recent experiment led by Rob Behary at William & Mary points the way toward a new kind of eye for…

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