Log inSign up
NYT Science
138.5K posts
Image
user avatar
NYT Science
@NYTScience
Science, Medicine, Environment, Space & Astronomy. Sign up for the Science Times email, in your inbox every Tuesday: nyti.ms/2EKZcNt
New York, NY
nytimes.com/science
Joined March 2007
443
Following
1.1M
Followers
  • user avatar
    NYT Science
    @NYTScience
    May 27, 2019
    No one in the Defense Department is saying that the objects were extraterrestrial, and experts emphasize that earthly explanations can generally be found for such incidents. But the objects have gotten the attention of the Navy.
    Navy pilots from the VFA-11 “Red Rippers” squadron aboard the aircraft carrier Theodore Roosevelt in 2015. The squadron began noticing strange objects just after the Navy upgraded the radar systems on its F/A-18 fighter planes.
    ‘Wow, What Is That?’ Navy Pilots Report Unexplained Flying Objects (Published 2019)
    From nytimes.com
  • user avatar
    NYT Science
    @NYTScience
    Aug 22, 2020
    Californians are mourning the damage inflicted by the recent fires to the ancient, towering conifers in Big Basin Redwoods State Park.
    The interior of a tree burned in Big Basin Redwoods State Park in Boulder Creek, Calif., on Friday.
    ‘It’s Hard to See Your Memories Burn’: Loss From Wildfires Grows in California (Published 2020)
    From nytimes.com
  • user avatar
    NYT Science
    @NYTScience
    Jun 16, 2020
    Flushing a toilet can generate a cloud of aerosol droplets that rises nearly three feet. Those droplets -- which could be laden with coronavirus particles -- may linger in the air long enough to be inhaled by a shared toilet’s next user.
    Image
    Flushing the Toilet May Fling Coronavirus Aerosols All Over (Published 2020)
    From nytimes.com
  • user avatar
    NYT Science
    @NYTScience
    Jun 17, 2019
    Dogs have a muscle that lets them make a face to melt a human’s heart. Wolves don't.
    A dachshund mix puppy waiting to be found by a family.
    Those Puppy Dog Eyes You Can’t Resist? Thank Evolution (Published 2019)
    From nytimes.com
  • user avatar
    NYT Science
    @NYTScience
    Jun 15, 2018
    Astronomers spotted a giant black hole in a nearby galaxy rip apart an unfortunate wayward star and spread half of it into a messy blaze of light and heat swirling toward doom
    This phenomenon of two colliding galaxies, collectively known as Arp 299, is 150 million light years away in the constellation Ursa Major.
    Black Hole Drags Star to Dusty Death (Published 2018)
    From nytimes.com
  • user avatar
    NYT Science
    @NYTScience
    Sep 18, 2018
    “So maybe 10 years from now, people will be laughing I paid so much, but somebody needs to make the first payment. Otherwise space development is not going to evolve. That’s why I think I should be the one to do this.”
    Yusaku Maezawa was introduced on Monday as the first SpaceX customer for a trip around the moon.
    With Moon as His Muse, Japanese Billionaire Signs Up for SpaceX Voyage (Published 2018)
    From nytimes.com
  • user avatar
    NYT Science
    @NYTScience
    Sep 21, 2018
    Why did scientists give ecstasy to octopuses? It wasn't in the name of peace, love, unity and respect and a hope that the cephalopods would emerge from their tanks to wait for an eight-tentacled D.J. to drop the bass.
    An octopus on its way to an underwater EDM festival.
    On Ecstasy, Octopuses Reached Out for a Hug (Published 2018)
    From nytimes.com
  • user avatar
    NYT Science
    @NYTScience
    Nov 26, 2018
    Now that NASA's InSight is on Mars, what's it going to do? See for yourself with your smartphone (this is a lot of fun on desktop, too) #MarsLanding nyti.ms/2RfURU1
    Image
    00:00
  • user avatar
    NYT Science
    @NYTScience
    Jan 24, 2017
    Gag order, schmag order: The Badlands National Park Twitter account went rogue with tweets about climate change
    President Trump met with automobile industry leaders in the Roosevelt Room of the White House on Tuesday.
    Press Secretary Affirms that Trump Believes Lie of Millions of Illegal Voters (Published 2017)
    From nytimes.com
  • user avatar
    NYT Science
    @NYTScience
    Jun 10, 2023
    Dr. Harald zur Hausen, a German virologist who won the Nobel Prize in Medicine in 2008 for his discovery that the seemingly benign human papillomavirus, known for causing warts, also caused cervical cancer, has died at 87.
    Dr. Harald zur Hausen at the German Cancer Research Center in Heidelberg in 2008, the year he won the Nobel Prize in Medicine.
    Harald zur Hausen, 87, Nobelist Who Found Cause of Cervical Cancer, Dies (Published 2023)
    From nytimes.com
    741K
  • user avatar
    NYT Science
    @NYTScience
    Feb 1, 2018
    It can regrow its limbs and internal organs, but that may not be the most amazing thing about the axolotl. Turns out, this salamander has the largest genome ever sequenced.
    The axolotl is an salamander whose genome has 32 billion base pairs, ten times the number in the human genome and the largest ever sequenced.
    The Smiling Axolotl Hides a Secret: A Giant Genome (Published 2018)
    From nytimes.com
  • user avatar
    NYT Science
    @NYTScience
    Oct 21, 2019
    THE LOUDEST BIRD SONG EVER RECORDED COMES FROM A BIRD IN THE AMAZON THAT SCREAMS RIGHT INTO THE FACES OF ITS POTENTIAL MATES
    Researchers were surprised by the thickness of the bellbird’s abdominal wall, a feature they suspected it might need to make its piercing calls.
    The Loudest Bird in the World Has a Song Like a Pile Driver (Published 2019)
    From nytimes.com
  • user avatar
    NYT Science
    @NYTScience
    Apr 26, 2019
    Vaccine critics often raise religious objections to immunization. But authorities of most major religions have examined the moral questions. Their advice: Get your children vaccinated. nyti.ms/2ZDEBk8
  • user avatar
    NYT Science
    @NYTScience
    Aug 3, 2022
    The pigs had been lying dead in the lab for an hour — no blood circulating, their hearts still, their brain waves flat. When researchers injected a solution called OrganEx into their bodies, their hearts beat and organ cells started to function again.
    Researchers said they hoped to increase the supply of human organs for transplant by allowing doctors to obtain viable organs long after death.
    A ‘Reversible’ Form of Death? Scientists Revive Cells in Dead Pigs’ Organs. (Published 2022)
    From nytimes.com

New to X?

Sign up now to get your own personalized timeline!

Create account

By signing up, you agree to the Terms of Service and Privacy Policy, including Cookie Use.

Terms·Privacy·Cookies·Accessibility·Ads Info·© 2026 X Corp.
Don't miss what's happening
People on X are the first to know.
Log inSign up
Advertisement
Advertisement