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Science, curated & edited by AI

Nature Is Weird

1,449 papers  ·  Page 25 of 29

Findings that are real but counterintuitive. The world behaves in a way that surprises even the people who study it for a living.

Physics
What happens deep inside Earth is actually being controlled by a tiny 'quantum revolution' happening inside individual iron atoms.
Mar 24
Physics
Scientists found a way to force crystals into a permanent 'wave' of electricity and physical stress.
Mar 24
Physics
Salt and gravity carve five very specific patterns into melting ice—like 'scallops' and 'channels.'
Mar 24
Physics
Mathematicians found there are only seven possible ways the 'laws of physics' could work to allow for stable teleportation.
Mar 24
Physics
Particles we thought were just math myths have been found hiding inside real-life crystals.
Mar 24
Space
A dead star in our own galaxy was caught spitting out the same mystery radio bursts we usually see from deep space.
Mar 24
Physics
Millions of people moving between cities actually follow the same math laws as gas particles in a jar.
Mar 24
Space
Those 'Little Red Dots' in the early universe might be monster 'quasi-stars' powered by black holes on the inside.
Mar 24
Physics
Electricity flows through an atom-sized hole at the exact same speed, no matter how much salt is in the water.
Mar 24
Physics
Identical synthetic droplets can suddenly start 'chasing' or 'running away' from each other like they're alive.
Mar 24
Physics
Light has been forced to clump together into rigid 'molecules' that look like crystals.
Mar 24
Physics
A new quantum experiment suggests the world doesn't actually have 'set' properties until someone measures them.
Mar 24
Space
We’ve been underestimating the volcanic power of Jupiter’s moon Io by about ten times.
Mar 24
Physics
Scientists found flames that spin in circles faster than they’re actually supposed to be able to burn.
Mar 24
Physics
Marathon routes are rigged to look good—they're packed with 15 times more museums than the rest of the city.
Mar 24
Physics
Super-thin films follow the exact same 'universal law' to stop a bullet, even if they’re made of totally different stuff.
Mar 24
Biology
Turns out almost all bees have magnetic particles for navigation, not just the social honey bees.
Mar 24
Health
For every person who gets HIV permanently, the body probably fights off four or five infections that just vanish on their own.
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Psychology
Families of autistic kids actually bounced back mentally faster during wartime than families without autistic kids.
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Psychology
Your ability to 'see' things in your mind didn't evolve from your eyes—it came from your gut and inner organs.
Mar 24
Economics
High levels of anxiety and worry are actually linked to making way better economic decisions in daily life.
Mar 24
Economics
Putting real-world assets on the blockchain allows for 'leveraged loops' that regular markets just can't handle.
Mar 24
Economics
Using a few memes in an article makes people quit, but using a ton of them actually makes people finish reading.
Mar 24
Economics
Republican homeowners in Florida are way less likely to hurricane-proof their houses than Democrats, even in the same high-risk zones.
Mar 24
Economics
Boredom in modern life isn't about having nothing to do—it's usually caused by having way too much on your plate.
Mar 24
Economics
Your brain treats social disagreement like a mechanical error, actually slowing down your physical reactions as if you'd made a mistake.
Mar 24
Economics
Wildfire smoke is way more likely to give you type 2 diabetes than regular city air pollution.
Mar 24
Economics
Managers who talk too much about the future during earnings calls accidentally tank their company's stock by confusing everyone.
Mar 24
Economics
AI safety filters create a 'shadow' that stops models from using facts they already know, making them dumber even when they have the right answer.
Mar 24
Economics
River mouths often act like a 'vacuum' that sucks plastic out of the ocean and pulls it back into the rivers.
Mar 24
AI
You can get a whole crowd to agree on something even if everyone only knows what the person right next to them is thinking.
Mar 23
AI
Over 10% of new medical papers are being written by AI now—three years ago, that number was zero.
Mar 23
AI
Massive wealth gaps might just be a math problem: if you always pick the better of two random options, inequality is basically guaranteed.
Mar 23
Physics
Even the simplest one-on-one connections can suddenly explode into complex group drama once you add a third person.
Mar 23
Physics
The chaotic mess of chemicals crashing around inside your cells actually ticks along like a perfectly timed clock.
Mar 23
Physics
Your brain builds its own 'express lanes' for signals to save energy, acting just like a city’s subway system.
Mar 23
Physics
A single toxic loop in a friend group can keep everyone arguing forever, even if everyone actually wants to get along.
Mar 23
Physics
A tiny lopsidedness in how lasers hit targets might prove that the most basic law of quantum physics is actually wrong.
Mar 23
Physics
You can sort tiny particles just by making them 'forget' where they're going and forcing them to restart over and over.
Mar 23
Space
That planet we thought we found around a bright star? Total ghost story. The world's best space telescope just proved it doesn't exist.
Mar 23
Space
Astronomers found two dead stars orbiting each other so fast that a whole 'year' goes by in just 27 minutes.
Mar 23
Physics
Your personality only explains about 0.2% of your friendships; the rest is just about who you happen to be standing near.
Mar 23
Physics
A cell's ability to survive when food is scarce depends entirely on the specific shape of its internal 'wiring.'
Mar 23
Physics
There’s a new universal law that explains why hot coffee can actually cool down faster than lukewarm coffee.
Mar 23
Space
Astronomers found a giant ring of dust spinning around two stars in the completely wrong direction.
Mar 23
Physics
There’s a crystal that looks the same from every angle but hides a secret path that only light can find.
Mar 23
Biology
The Shroud of Turin is a biological mess—it’s covered in DNA from everything from Mediterranean coral to bananas.
Mar 23
Biology
Whether you get a scar or heal perfectly depends entirely on the specific way your immune cells decide to die.
Mar 23
Earth
Tropical forests are lying to our satellites; they look green and healthy from space even when they're dying on the inside.
Mar 23
Psychology
The language you speak acts like a built-in stopwatch, deciding exactly when you’ll notice a mistake in the real world.
Mar 23