. Scientific Frontline

Monday, November 17, 2025

TU Dresden Develops Laser Drill to Explore Icy Moons

Researchers from TU Dresden during field tests of the laser ice drill on a glacier in Austria
Photo Credit: Technische Universitat Dresden

Researchers at the Institute of Aerospace Engineering at TU Dresden have developed a laser-based ice drilling system that could help to penetrate the kilometer-thick layers of ice on celestial bodies such as Jupiter's moon Europa or Saturn's Enceladus in the future. In this way, underground oceans and possible traces of past life could be investigated in a targeted manner. Initial laboratory and field tests on glaciers in the Alps and the Arctic have shown that snow and ice density can be reliably measured.

Molecules assem­bled by hand

Weakly bound KCs molecules are transferred into what is known as their “absolute ground state”.
Image Credit: University of Innsbruck

Researchers from Hanns-Christoph Nägerl's group have produced the world’s first ultracold KCs molecules in their absolute ground state. Starting by mixing clouds of potassium and caesium atoms cooled almost to absolute zero temperature, they were able to use a combination of magnetic fields and laser beams to associate pairs of freely moving atoms into chemically stable molecules. 

As many of us remember from chemistry classes, molecules can only be produced in chemical reactions, which always occur at unpredictable, random times. We may also remember that higher temperatures make reactions faster, and sufficiently low temperatures may stop reactions from taking place altogether. These statements do not apply if chemistry is conducted by physicists. In the last 20 years, several different types of molecules have been produced in gaseous mixtures at temperatures close to absolute zero, using methods that narrow the exact time at which the molecules are made to a few microseconds. Until recently, KCs remained a gaping hole in the table of possible element combinations that have already been turned into molecules in this way. 

Wheat could use far more water than expected during future heatwaves

Dr Robert Caine
Photo Credit: Courtesy of University of Sheffield

Wheat crops prioritize water loss during extreme future climate conditions, according to new research from the University of Sheffield 

The study, led by Dr Robert Caine and Dr Holly Croft from the School of Biosciences at the University of Sheffield, revealed wheat crops lose many of the key water-saving benefits usually associated with growth at higher atmospheric concentrations of carbon dioxide when plants were exposed to heatwave conditions. 

These findings are vital for understanding how to optimize future wheat crop productivity and water usage. With heatwaves becoming increasingly routine as atmospheric CO2 concentration continues to rise, plant breeders will need to consider how crops use and conserve water when developing new wheat varieties to ensure it can grow effectively and survive extreme weather. 

Destination: Mars. First Stop: Iceland?

This picturesque vista is the watershed in southwest Iceland, where researchers collected mars rock analog samples.
Image Credit: Michael Thorpe/NASA Goddard

To say that a trip from Earth to Mars is merely a long one would be a massive understatement. On July 30, 2020, when the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) sent its Mars rover “Perseverance” atop an Atlas V rocket to the red planet to collect rock samples, it took the rover nearly seven months to reach its destination. This was only one step in a complex process that will take at least a decade to bring home these samples from Mars. While this is an unusually long wait for a sample shipment, it gives scientists ample time to find the best approach to study these rare and precious rocks.

In preparation, an international collaboration of scientists has started investigating sedimentary rock samples found in Iceland, a country whose terrain shares some compositional similarities and whose climate may be similar to ancient climates in certain Martian regions. Their results, published today in American Mineralogist, shed light on how high-resolution analyses of these complex, natural minerals can give scientists a deeper understanding of their geological history, both at home on Earth and 194 million miles away on Mars, though this requires careful interpretation. This collaboration is made up of researchers from the University of Maryland, NASA Goddard, Johnson Space Center, University of Göttingen, Chungbuk National University, and the National Synchrotron Light Source II (NSLS-II), a U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science user facility at DOE’s Brookhaven National Laboratory.

The world’s oldest RNA extracted from woolly mammoth

“Such studies could fundamentally reshape our understanding of extinct megafauna as well as other species, revealing the many hidden layers of biology that have remained frozen in time until now”, says postdoc at the University of Caopenhagen, Emilio Mármol.
Image Credit: Scientific Frontline / stock image

Scientists have taken an important step closer to understanding the mythical mammoths that roamed the Earth thousands of years ago. 

For the first time ever, a research team has succeeded in isolating and sequencing RNA molecules from woolly mammoths dating back to the Ice Age. These RNA sequences are the oldest ever recovered and come from mammoth tissue preserved in the Siberian permafrost for nearly 40,000 years. The study, published in the journal Cell, shows that not only DNA and proteins, but also RNA, can be preserved for very long periods of time, and provide new insights into the biology of species that have long since become extinct. 

Sunday, November 16, 2025

A new theory of molecular evolution

Evolutionary biologist Jianzhi Zhang
Photo Credit: Courtesy of University of Michigan
For a long time, evolutionary biologists have thought that the genetic mutations that drive the evolution of genes and proteins are largely neutral: they’re neither good nor bad, but just ordinary enough to slip through the notice of selection.

Now, a University of Michigan study has flipped that theory on its head.

In the process of evolution, mutations occur which can then become fixed, meaning that every individual in the population carries that mutation. A longstanding theory, called the Neutral Theory of Molecular Evolution, posits that most genetic mutations that are fixed are neutral. Bad mutations will be quickly discarded by selection, according to the theory, which also assumes that good mutations are so rare that most fixations will be neutral, says evolutionary biologist Jianzhi Zhang.

The U-M study, led by Zhang, aimed to examine whether this was true. The researchers found that so many good mutations occurred that the Neutral Theory cannot hold. At the same time, they found that the rate of fixations is too low for the large number of beneficial mutations that Zhang’s team observed.

To resolve this, the researchers suggest that mutations that are beneficial in one environment may become harmful in another environment. These beneficial mutations may not become fixed because of frequent environmental changes. The study, supported by the U.S. National Institutes of Health, was published in Nature Ecology and Evolution.

MailWasher Pro

Image Credit: Courtesy of Firetrust Limited

In the modern digital ecosystem, the email inbox remains a central hub for communication. However, it is also the primary attack vector for spam, phishing attempts, and malware. Most email clients and webmail services provide built-in spam filtering, but these are often reactive and imperfect. MailWasher Pro, from Firetrust, is a long-standing "pre-emptive" spam filter that offers a different, more robust solution: it cleans your email before it ever touches your computer.

This review examines the technology, features, and overall value of MailWasher Pro.

Ecology: In-Depth Description

Photo Credit: Глеб Коровко

Ecology is the scientific study of the interactions between living organisms and their environment, including both living (biotic) and non-living (abiotic) components. Its primary goals are to understand the principles governing the distribution, abundance, and relationships of organisms, as well as the flow of energy and materials within ecosystems.

Earth Science: In-Depth Description

Image Credit: Scientific Frontline / stock image

Earth Science is the comprehensive study of the planet Earth, encompassing its physical composition, structure, the processes that shape it, and its history. Its primary goal is to understand the complex, integrated systems of our planet—including its solid land (lithosphere), water (hydrosphere), air (atmosphere), and life (biosphere)—and how they interact, change over time, and affect human life.

Conservation: In-Depth Description

Photo Credit: Tomáš Malík

Conservation is the scientific discipline and practice dedicated to the protection, management, and restoration of Earth's biological diversity—including species, their habitats, and ecosystems—to prevent their decline, extinction, and degradation, while ensuring the sustainable use of natural resources. The primary goals of conservation are to maintain the planet's ecological health, preserve evolutionary processes, and secure the vital ecosystem services upon which all life, including humanity, depends.

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