In The News: College of Sciences

TRT World

The American Southwest is running dry—literally. Lake Mead, the lifeline of Las Vegas, is shrinking at an alarming rate, and the city that defied nature is now facing one of its toughest challenges yet. But in true Vegas fashion, this city of reinvention is fighting back. From pioneering water conservation efforts to groundbreaking innovations like WAVR, a system that harvests water straight from the air, scientists and engineers are racing against time to secure the region’s future. Meanwhile, researchers are turning to an unlikely hero—cacti—as a potential solution for drought-resistant agriculture and even biofuel.

Science

In the early 1600s, Galileo Galilee trained a telescope of his own making on Jupiter and spotted its four largest moons. Four centuries later, scientists are still seeking to understand exactly how those moons formed billions of years ago from a swirling disk of gas, dust, and ice that once surrounded the infant planet. Now, a new computer simulation suggests shadows cast by the inner region of that circumplanetary disk (CPD) may have created cold spots in the wispier outer region, creating the physical conditions needed for those materials to congeal into the moons Galileo spotted.

Epoch Times

Modern physics assumes a universe with more than four dimensions. This also seems to be indicated by studies in medicine, perinatal psychology and physics involving people at the time of death and after near-death experiences.

Astrobiology

A new paper released today documents the first soil, airfall dust, and rock fragment samples collected by NASA for return from Mars. We checked in with the ºÚÁÏÍø astrobiologist leading the specimen selection team for intel on what the samples so far reveal.

Mars Daily

NASA's Perseverance rover has successfully collected its first soil, airfall dust, and rock fragment samples, marking a historic step in Martian exploration. A new study highlights these early sample returns and their implications for understanding Mars' past.

StudyFinds

In the search for extraterrestrial life, few things are more valuable than a scoop of dirt, provided it’s from the right place. NASA’s Perseverance rover has now collected such samples from Mars’ Jezero Crater, a location specifically chosen for its potential to reveal whether the Red Planet once harbored life, according to a new international study.

KVVU-TV: Fox 5

Two days of record high temperatures could trigger an early response from Mother Nature.

Mashable

It's actually good news that NASA spotted a sizable asteroid with a (small) chance of hitting Earth in 2032. It means our asteroid-sleuthing telescopes are working.

Epoch Health

Multiple lines of research, including medicine, perinatal psychology and physics, suggest that our consciousness links to higher dimensions.

CNN

Mysterious fast radio bursts, or millisecond-long bright flashes of radio waves from space, have intrigued astronomers since the first detection of the phenomenon in 2007. The enigmatic signals, known as FRBs, release as much energy in less than the blink of an eye as the sun emits in one day.

KSNV-TV: News 3

The devastating wildfires tearing across Southern California are being exacerbated by climate change, according to Drew Peltier, an assistant professor of ecology at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.

Simply Recipes

You dry pots with it, wipe your hands on it, and use it to swab the counter, but when you’re done—if you’re like me—you probably hang your trusty kitchen towel right back on the oven or dishwasher door handle. And this cycle repeats for days, weeks, maybe even months with a single dish rag.