New Method for Growing Cyanobacteria Under Mars-Like Conditions NASA, in collaboration with other leading space…
Browsing: Frontiers
Frontiers is a leading open-access academic publisher founded in 2007 with a mission to accelerate scientific discovery and make research freely available to the public. Covering a wide range of disciplines—from neuroscience and health to engineering and sustainability—Frontiers emphasizes transparency, rigorous peer review, and digital innovation. Its platform supports collaborative science communication, helping researchers share their findings with both the academic community and a broader global audience.
Far underneath the ice shelves of the Antarctic, there’s more life than expected, finds a…
New research linking major depression to a reduced number of cells in the brain that…
Glacier Retreat in the Alps May Lead to Long-Term Biodiversity Loss Beyond the ski slopes,…
The culture-dependent study allowed to isolate a surprisingly large number of diverse and previously unreported…
Analyses of the materials in the scrolls helps put the object into a historical context…
Fishermen, swimmers, and seafood enthusiasts may already know the dangers of “red tides,” but a…
Study applies artificial intelligence to analyze content of nightmares using crowdsourced data from more than…
Bringing neuroscience out of the laboratory and into the concert hall. We all know that…
Large-diameter trees make up 3% of total stems, but account for 42% of total carbon…
Radio-resistance of bacteria can be induced independently, to the level of Deinococcus radiodurans (one of…
A decade-long study of the iconic fish has found male whale sharks grow quickly, before…
Thanks to the sniffling noses, coughs, and colds that accompany the colder months of the…
https://youtu.be/_YzdbRPoQa8 Cuvierina atlantica, a thecosomatous pteropod with an elongated shell. Credit: David Murphy and coauthors…
Study uses satellites and photographs to fill in important gaps in migratory patterns for one…
Tanpopo mission addresses the possibility of natural interplanetary transport of microbial life called panspermia. Imagine…
Bird and reptile tears aren’t so unlike our own, shows a new study in Frontiers…
In the USA, where the curve of infections has not yet flattened since the beginning…