Breaking 15:40 Study finds 3000 genes differ between male and female brains 15:30 US receives 6,000 applications for air traffic control jobs in just 12 hours, officials say 15:15 Trump says U.S. will maintain blockade despite partial reopening of strait of hormuz 14:50 Gene discovery in salamanders brings human limb regeneration closer 14:30 Reliance rejects Iranian oil cargoes as sanctions waiver deadline approaches 13:50 Arthur Hayes calls crypto a no trade zone amid war and ai risks 13:20 Hassabis says ai’s biggest challenge goes beyond chatbot competition 13:15 Oil prices fall 5 percent as hopes rise for easing tensions in the Middle East 13:00 Tesla expands chip hiring in Taiwan as Terafab project accelerates 12:40 European gas prices rise as Iran ceasefire deadline nears 12:20 Modi and Macron discuss Hormuz crisis ahead of Paris conference 12:00 James Webb telescope detects methane on interstellar comet for first time 10:00 Warnings grow over gradual erosion of US dollar global dominance 09:40 Mozilla unveils Thunderbolt, a self-hosted AI client for enterprises 09:20 Perplexity launches AI-powered Personal Computer assistant for Mac users 08:40 NASA probe reveals unexpected particle behavior during solar explosion 08:00 Ford recalls nearly 1.4 million vehicles over software issue 07:50 OpenAI unveils GPT-Rosalind to accelerate life sciences research 07:45 Venezuela releases dozens of political detainees amid US pressure 17:20 Pentagon says 13 ships turned back as Iran blockade faces evasion tactics 17:00 Oil giants set to gain $234 billion windfall from war driven prices


ISS deorbit scheduled to begin in 2028 before planned 2030 ocean descent

The International Space Station will begin a gradual descent from orbit in 2028 before making a controlled plunge into the ocean in 2030, according to Roscosmos chief Dmitry Bakanov. The timeline confirms plans long discussed between Russia and NASA as the two agencies prepare to retire the aging orbital......

MOTHRA telescope in Chile aims to reveal faint cosmic web structures

A new astronomical instrument under construction in the mountains of Chile is set to become the largest lens based telescope array ever built. Known as MOTHRA, the Modular Optical Telephoto Hyperspectral Robotic Array will combine 1,140 Canon telephoto lenses to observe extremely faint structures in......

Artificial intelligence tools accelerate drug and protein research breakthroughs

A new generation of artificial intelligence tools is transforming biomedical research, enabling scientists to analyze genetic regulation, decode protein structures, and design drug compounds in a fraction of the time previously required. Recent studies show that machine learning systems can compress......

Startup unveils first full brain emulation controlling a simulated body

Eon Systems, a startup based in San Francisco, has introduced what it describes as the first full brain emulation of a fruit fly controlling a physically simulated body, producing several natural behaviors without machine learning training. The announcement, made on March 6, marks a significant step......

Interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS found rich in methanol, ALMA observations show

Astronomers using the Atacama Large Millimeter Submillimeter Array have detected unusually high levels of methanol in the interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS, revealing a chemical composition rarely seen in comets formed within our solar system. The findings, reported by the National Radio Astronomy Observatory......

Nasa dart impact changed asteroid orbit around the sun, study finds

When NASA deliberately crashed a spacecraft into the asteroid moon Dimorphos in 2022, scientists quickly confirmed the collision shortened its orbit around its larger companion, Didymos. A new study now shows the impact also altered the path of the entire asteroid pair around the Sun, marking the first......

Physicists create first computer model of long theorized ideal glass

Physicists at the University of Oregon have produced the first computer model of an “ideal glass,” a theoretical form of matter in which molecules are packed as tightly and stably as possible while still maintaining the disordered structure typical of glass. The achievement, reported in Physical......

New imaging technique reveals microscopic networks behind catalyst reactions

Scientists from the University of Warwick and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have directly observed how microscopic networks on catalyst surfaces coordinate chemical reactions, challenging long standing assumptions about how catalysts function. The discovery could accelerate the development......

Forty years of data reveal subtle shifts inside the Sun

Researchers analyzing more than four decades of solar observations have discovered that the internal structure of the Sun changes subtly between periods of low magnetic activity, a finding that could improve predictions of solar storms and their effects on Earth. A team from the University of Birmingham......

Jupiter-bound spacecraft captures striking images of interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS

A European Space Agency spacecraft traveling toward Jupiter has captured detailed images of the interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS, revealing a bright coma and a long tail of gas and dust as the rare visitor speeds away from the solar system. The observations were made by the Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer mission,......

China explores space solar station concept to weaken typhoons

Chinese researchers working on an ambitious space based solar power project say the technology could eventually serve purposes beyond clean energy generation, including the possibility of weakening typhoons and wirelessly recharging satellites across space. Duan Baoyan, the chief scientist behind China’s......

Cornell imaging method reveals atomic scale defects in semiconductor chips

A Cornell led team has directly imaged atomic scale defects inside advanced computer chips, using a high resolution three dimensional electron microscopy technique developed with Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company and Advanced Semiconductor Materials. The method, based on multislice electron......

Six planets to align in weekend sky event

A rare planetary alignment will be visible this weekend as six planets—Mercury, Venus, Neptune, Saturn, Uranus, and Jupiter form an arc across the night sky. NASA says the so‑called “planetary parade” will peak on February 28, offering a fleeting chance to observe multiple planets......

  • Fajr
  • Sunrise
  • Dhuhr
  • Asr
  • Maghrib
  • Isha

This website, walaw.press, uses cookies to provide you with a good browsing experience and to continuously improve our services. By continuing to browse this site, you agree to the use of these cookies.