Page Updated: Wednesday, June 24, 2026 10:20 PM ET

Live Science - Science

Satellites reveal Earth has a surprising symmetry in the way it reflects light - and it might be tied to the El Ni o cycle - Even though the Eastern and Western halves of Earth are fairly different, they reflect the same amount of sunlight, a new study finds.

6 hours ago

Water might secretly be a mix of 2 different liquids, scientists say -- For decades, scientists suspected water secretly behaves like two different liquids. A new AI-powered study has finally caught it happening at the molecular level. -- Larissa G. Capella

6 hours ago

China's Einstein Probe detected a mysterious cosmic explosion - and scientists have no idea what caused it -- The explosion, consisting of two mysterious double flares, matches no known space eruption. -- Skyler Ware

8 hours ago

'A weird result from an already weird hominin': Archaeologists discover all Homo naledi skeletons found in South African cave are female -- A cutting-edge analysis of the teeth from Homo naledi skeletons in a South African cave system found no males within the group. Experts are unsure what to make of the finding. -- Kristina Killgrove

10 hours ago

'Weirdos of the sperm whale world' appear to be evolving 2 different dialects, audio recordings suggest -- Thousands of recordings of sperm whale communications in the Mediterranean Sea reveal that the population might be splitting into two groups with their own dialects. -- Chris Simms

10 hours ago

60 million stars: Euclid space telescope snaps largest-ever close-up photo of the Milky Way's center -- Planet hunters and stargazers will both benefit from the Euclid space telescope's newest image, which was released after 26 hours of deep-space observations. -- Elizabeth Howell

11 hours ago

'Unequivocal evidence' of Earth's oldest impact crater turns out to be off by half a billion years -- A new study updates the age of Earth's oldest known meteorite impact crater, the North Pole Dome crater, which scientists previously claimed was 3.47 billion years old. -- Sascha Pare

16 hours ago

Drug-induced 'brain freeze' may help protect the brain after a stroke, early study suggests -- By tamping down metabolism, a new experimental treatment that induces a hypothermia-like state may slow stroke-associated brain injury, scientists report. -- Lauren Schneider

1 day ago

NASA satellite captures wave of warm water hundreds of miles long that signals a devastatingly strong El Ni o -- This year's El Ni o is on track to be among the strongest ever recorded. -- Skyler Ware

1 day ago

Something in space is changing alien signals before they can reach Earth, new paper claims -- New research suggests that alien radio signals may be transformed by plasma from their home stars - and scientists on Earth could be overlooking prime evidence of alien intelligence. -- Sarah Wild

1 day ago

One underlying cause of inflammatory bowel disease pinpointed in new study -- Autoantibodies may be disabling one of the body's anti-inflammatory brakes in some IBD patients, a new study finds. -- Christoph Schwaiger

1 day ago

Never-before-seen shark that 'walks' on land discovered off Papua New Guinea -- Divers in Papua New Guinea recently discovered a new species of carpet shark that can traverse low-lying reefs. -- Kenna Hughes-Castleberry

1 day ago

James Webb telescope detects 'galaxy-killing wind' near the dawn of time -- New observations from the James Webb Space Telescope show that ancient galaxies lived fast and died young because of intense, collision-driven winds. -- Ivan Farkas

1 day ago

'You kill the bacteria and heal the wound at the same time': Emerging nanotech could be the future of wound healing -- Slow-healing lesions - common in diabetics and burn victims - can lead to lingering infections that resist antibiotic treatment. A new approach using light-activated therapies may offer a solution. -- Zunnash Khan

1 day ago

Rare animals spotted, California due a major quake, photon split into infinite others, and China 'tames nature.' Science news this week - June 20, 2026: Our weekly roundup of the latest science in the news, as well as a few fascinating articles to keep you entertained over the weekend. By - Ben Turner - Published - 20 June 26

11 hours ago

Watch bison herd defend a newborn calf from wolf attack in a primeval Polish forest -- Researchers have captured first-of-its-kind footage of a wolf attack on European bison in the Bialowieza Primeval Forest. The recording shifts our understanding of predator-prey interactions in this region. -- Sascha Pare

1 day ago

Estrogen levels in both the male and female brain may shape memory's resilience in face of stress -- Traumatic experiences can cause memory problems, and estrogen may be a key factor that shapes the brain's resilience against such stressors, a mouse study finds. -- Nicoletta Lanese

1 day ago

'A completely different story': 300 million-year-old fossils reveal the first vertebrate land dwellers weren't what we thought, researchers claim -- Our ancient four-legged ancestors didn't have an amphibian-like life cycle when they began walking on land, according to a new study of rare fossils found near Chicago. -- Patrick Pester

1 day ago

Denisovan DNA influences the immune systems of modern Oceanians - but researchers aren't sure why -- Genes inherited from the now-extinct Denisovans are actively playing a role in the immune system of some people from Oceania. -- Sophie Berdugo

1 day ago

Wildlife inside Chernobyl exclusion zone acted differently during Russia's invasion, camera traps reveal -- Camera footage in Ukraine's Chernobyl exclusion zone revealed that mammals became less active - especially at night - during the Russian occupation, highlighting the war's immediate impact on wildlife. -- Kenna Hughes-Castleberry

1 day ago