Novice (angleščina) - New Scientist

What if the idea of the autism spectrum is completely wrong?
05. January 2026 (17:10)
For years, we've thought of autism as lying on a spectrum, but emerging evidence suggests that it comes in several distinct types. The implications for how we support autistic people could be profound (New Scientist)
Weird clump in the early universe is piping hot and we don’t know why
05. January 2026 (17:00)
A galaxy cluster in the early universe is 10 times hotter than it ought to be, which may reshape how we think these enormous structures formed (New Scientist)
El Niño was linked to famines in Europe in the early modern period
05. January 2026 (16:00)
A study of 160 European famines between 1500 and 1800 shows that El Niño weather events led to the onset of some famines and extended the duration of others (New Scientist)
The best new popular science books of January 2026
05. January 2026 (16:00)
A host of new science books are due to hit shelves in January, by authors including Claudia Hammond, Deborah Cohen and Daisy Fancourt (New Scientist)
2026 will shed light on whether a little-known drug helps with autism
05. January 2026 (15:00)
The US government is approving the drug leucovorin to address rising rates of autism, despite limited evidence that it works. This year, results from the largest trial yet should give more insight into its potential (New Scientist)
A strange kind of quantumness may be key to quantum computers' success
05. January 2026 (13:00)
Researchers at Google have used their Willow quantum computer to demonstrate that "quantum contextuality" may be a crucial ingredient for its computational prowess (New Scientist)
The best new science fiction books of January 2026
05. January 2026 (11:00)
Big hitter Peter F. Hamilton has a new sci-fi novel out this month – and Booker winner George Saunders ventures into speculative fiction with his latest book, Vigil (New Scientist)
Ghostly particles might just break our understanding of the universe
05. January 2026 (09:00)
An analysis of several experiments aimed at detecting the mysterious neutrino has identified a hint of a crack in the standard model of particle physics (New Scientist)
Was our earliest ancestor a knuckle-dragger, or did it walk upright?
02. January 2026 (20:00)
Did Sahelanthropus, which lived 7 million years ago, walk on two legs like a modern human? It's complicated (New Scientist)
Gargantuan black hole may be a remnant from the dawn of the universe
02. January 2026 (13:00)
Astronomers were puzzled by a black hole around 50 million times the mass of the sun with no stars, spotted by the James Webb Space Telescope – now simulations suggest it could be a primordial black hole, something we have never seen before (New Scientist)