Cosmos Magazine3 min read
What happened NEXT?
IT'S BEEN 18 MONTHS since I climbed the biggest blue gum in the universe in the Grove of Giants in southern lutruwita/Tasmania. My arboreal journey into Lathamus Keep was made possible by canopy scientist Jen Sanger, photographer Steve Pearce and the
Cosmos Magazine2 min read
Computer Games Might Be Good For You
Professor Daniel Johnson is redefining the narrative around interactive media, merging his academic prowess and passion for gaming to challenge prevalent misconceptions about video games, presenting them not as mere sources of entertainment but as si
Cosmos Magazine2 min read
Pottery Find Reshapes Understanding Of First Nations People
WHAT'S BELIEVED TO be the first evidence of pottery making by Australia's First Nations people has been unearthed at Jiigurru (Lizard Island) on the Great Barrier Reef. Small sherds – fragments of ceramic material – were uncovered in an archaeologica
Cosmos Magazine1 min read
Meet Vanessa Zepeda, Trailblazing Astrobiologist
From marine biology to environmental science to astrobiology, Vanessa's path has been a little curvy. It's even taken her to NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory! For her PhD at QUT, she studied the possibilities of life beyond Earth. Vanessa's research
Cosmos Magazine2 min read
From the Editor
WE LIVE IN A TIME DEFINED BY CHANGE, when things very rarely turn out in the way we expect. The world is full of variables, and often directions switch, paths diverge and even the limits of what is possible – and what is normal – shift. This issue –
Cosmos Magazine2 min read
An Ancient Life Revealed: Forager-turned-farmer Crossed Seas
A STONE-AGE skeleton found in a Danish peat bog has been analysed, fleshing out the ancient person's life and death in stunning detail. Nicknamed Vittrup Man, this individual died between 3300 and 3100 BCE, aged 30–40 years old. He is named for the s
Cosmos Magazine2 min read
Guess The Object
Let's move away from our regular focus on gadgets and devices to present these oddities. The one in the centre is the original; the others are casts. No more hints needed – the objects themselves contain all the info you need, if you know what you're
Cosmos Magazine1 min read
Focus: Ancient animals
1 Fossilised dinosaur footprints, plants and tree stumps in Alaska's far northwest reveal the area was a lush, warm riverine setting 100 million years ago. 2 An ancient amphibian ancestor found in Texas has been named Kermitops gratus in honour of ic
Cosmos Magazine2 min read
Inspiring Indigenous Scientist Empowers First Nations Youths
Dr Katrina Wruck, industrial chemist and proud Mabuigilaig and Goemulgal woman, is revolutionising the field of environmental chemistry and standing out as a beacon of hope for young Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people who often mistakenly b
Cosmos Magazine14 min read
Faster Higher Stronger Doper
What the hell? There was no other way to react to the bizarre headlines that dropped in November last year. “Tour de France rider tried to obtain marine worm haemoglobin for blood doping boost,” read Cycling News. “I never thought the next breakthrou
Cosmos Magazine2 min read
Wombats: Debunked
BACK IN FEBRUARY, Museums Victoria debunked long-circulating claims that the southern hairy-nosed wombat (Lasiorhinus latifrons) can run at speeds of 40km/h. (For context, this almost pips Usain Bolt's 43.99km/h world record for the 100-metre dash.)
Cosmos Magazine2 min read
Cosmic Speed Camera Reveals Staggering Pace Of Neutron Star Jets
SPACE IN A WORLD FIRST, astronomers have measured the speed of a neutron star's powerful jets. Turns out these energetic beams of energy and matter travel at 114,000 km per second – or about one third of the speed of light. Neutron stars are among th
Cosmos Magazine1 min read
The Future Of Gamma-ray Astronomy
CTAO will be the world's largest and most sensitive observatory for gamma-ray astronomy, 10 times more sensitive than any existing instrument. Between three classes of telescopes – each using segmented mirrors to reflect Cherenkov radiation into high
Cosmos Magazine1 min read
Introducing Bailey Richardson, Biomimicry Innovator
Winner of the ATSE Ezio Rizzardo Polymer Scholarship, Bailey Richardson, is using his PhD research to prepare for a future where biomimetic chemistry transforms healthcare and other industries. He builds peptides that fluoresce or change colour when
Cosmos Magazine2 min read
Webb Watch: JWST Zooms In On Distant Starburst
A GALAXY 12 MILLION light-years from Earth is brimming with new stars, NASA scientists have found. Pointing the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) at a patch of space in the constellation Ursa Major, they discovered a galaxy where new stars are bloomi
Cosmos Magazine1 min read
What Is Cherenkov Radiation?
Nothing can travel faster than the speed of light (c) – but this maximum speed only occurs in a perfect vacuum. Light travels slower through other mediums; in our atmosphere, for example, it travels at about 99.97% of c. So when a high-energy gamma r
Cosmos Magazine1 min read
CRISPR-Cas Genome Editing Might One Day Be Used To Cure HIV
ONE OF THE most significant challenges in treating HIV is the virus' ability to integrate its genome into the host's DNA. This means that lifelong antiretroviral therapy is essential, as latent HIV can reactivate from reservoirs as soon as treatment
Cosmos Magazine5 min read
Research Beyond Boundaries
In a world inundated by complex global challenges and new technology, innovative solutions are no longer born out of traditional research silos. Instead, they emerge from the fusion of diverse disciplines that ignites innovation and drives significan
Cosmos Magazine1 min read
Applied Maths To The Rescue: The Jack Powers Story
QUT PhD student, Jack Powers, may hold the key to solving Australia's elective surgery waiting list problems. His superpower? Applied mathematics. Currently, category one patients are disproportionately prioritised, meaning category three patients of
Cosmos Magazine1 min read
Swarms Of Drones Could Save Us From Wildfires
MULTIPLE SWARMS OF drones could be used to manage natural disasters like forest fires, according to researchers at the Indian Institute of Science (IISc). The use of drones in tackling natural disasters is not new, though they have yet to be used in
Cosmos Magazine12 min read
Condensed Matters
On a hot, dry day in February, I arrive at Charles Sturt University just outside the New South Wales town of Wagga Wagga. I'm here to meet a special breed of physicist. One by one, they arrive at the shady outdoor seating area of a campus café. Seaso
Cosmos Magazine1 min read
Digest
DANIELLE FUTSELAAR AND NATHALIE DEGENAAR, UNIVERSITY OF AMSTERDAM ■
Cosmos Magazine8 min read
Kaartadijini: Noongar Knowledge
“Western technological societies continue to fail biodiversity,” Stephen Hopper tells me bluntly. A world-renowned ecologist and professor of biodiversity at the University of Western Australia (UWA), Hopper believes that Indigenous land management p
Cosmos Magazine14 min read
Mirror worlds
In the physical realm, Tuvalu is under threat. The Pacific nation, made up of nine atolls dotting a 676-kilometre stretch of ocean midway between Hawai'i and Australia, is one of the lowest-lying countries in the world – its highest point peaks just
Cosmos Magazine2 min read
Massive Volcano “Hiding In Plain Sight” On Mars
A GIANT VOLCANO has been hiding on the surface of Mars. It measures 9022 metres high and 450 kilometres wide, making it nearly 200 metres taller than Mt Everest. And yet scientists have only just identified the behemoth, as well as possible glacier i
Cosmos Magazine1 min read
Does Having 100+ COVID Jabs Harm Your Immunity? Apparently Not.
A German man who claimed to have received 217 COVID-19 vaccinations within three years has shown no signs of immunity fatigue. In research published in The Lancet Infectious Diseases, scientists investigated this case of 'hypervaccination' by studyin
Cosmos Magazine1 min read
The Chemistry Behind The Many Flavours Of Edible Ants
With their high nutritional value and low environmental impact, insects are an alternative to animal proteins. Researchers believe understanding their flavour profiles is essential to create insect-based food products that can overcome psychological
Cosmos Magazine1 min read
Cosmos Magazine
Editor Lauren Fuge Art Director Kate Timms Graphic Designer Greg Barton Science Journalists Matthew Agius, Imma Perfetto, Evrim Yazgin Editor-at-Large Elizabeth Finkel cosmosmagazine.com CONTRIBUTORS Denise Cullen, David Hancock, Drew Rooke, Prianka
Cosmos Magazine1 min read
Search For Quantum Gravity At The South Pole
SCIENTISTS ARE GOING to extreme lengths – and places – to try and understand the fundamental nature of the universe. “Today, classical physics describes the phenomena in our normal surroundings such as gravity, while the atomic world can only be desc
Cosmos Magazine6 min read
What Makes A Moon?
For as long as humans have gazed up into the night sky, our closest celestial neighbour – the Moon – has peered back. So, while Neil Armstrong may have been the first man to step foot on it, cultures have been telling stories about the “man in the Mo
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