Novice (angleščina) - New Scientist

Do we have free will? Quantum experiments may soon reveal the answer
28. May 2025 (17:30)
Whether or not we have partial free will could soon be resolved by experiments in quantum physics, with potential consequences for everything from religion to quantum computers (New Scientist)
How visualisation sets you up for success by changing your cognition
28. May 2025 (16:00)
The vividness of your mind’s eye isn't fixed - and training it up is the secret tool of top athletes and businesspeople. Here’s how you can help develop yours (New Scientist)
Fossils show puzzling lack of evolution during last ice age peak
28. May 2025 (16:00)
Thousands of fossils from the La Brea tar pits in California show no signs of mammals and birds evolving in response to shifting temperatures over the past 50,000 years (New Scientist)
You can make fair dice from any shape you like
28. May 2025 (12:57)
Want to roll an armadillo when you play Dungeons & Dragons, instead of standard dice? Now you can, thanks to a technique for mapping the probabilities produced by any shape (New Scientist)
We’re getting close to recreating the first step in evolution of life
28. May 2025 (12:00)
Life is thought to have begun when RNA began replicating itself, and researchers have got close to achieving this in the lab (New Scientist)
Your imagination holds the power to make you healthier and happier
28. May 2025 (11:35)
Imagination isn’t mere childhood whimsy – harnessing its extraordinary capacities can benefit us all (New Scientist)
The world could experience a year above 2°C of warming by 2029
28. May 2025 (07:00)
2024 was the first single year to surpass the 1.5°C global warming threshold – now scientists predict that a year above 2°C is possible in the near future (New Scientist)
AI-powered weather forecasts could miss extreme storms
27. May 2025 (23:00)
Weather forecasts based on AI are faster and sometimes more accurate than traditional ones, but they may miss rare and unprecedented weather events – which are becoming more common as the climate changes (New Scientist)
Test of AI weather forecasts shows they miss extreme storms
27. May 2025 (23:00)
Weather forecasts based on AI are faster and sometimes more accurate than traditional ones, but they may miss rare and unprecedented weather events – which are becoming more common as the climate changes (New Scientist)
The extremes of imagination reveal how our brains perceive reality
27. May 2025 (20:00)
The worlds inside our heads can be dramatically different. What does that reveal about how our minds shape our lives, asks cognitive neurologist Adam Zeman (New Scientist)