China must share data on COVID-19's origins 'immediately,' WHO scientist demands | Baseball home runs could increase by 10% in the next 80 years. Here's why | Strange radio bursts that outshine entire galaxies may come from colliding neutron stars, new study suggests
Created for {EMAIL} | [Web Version]( April 7, 2023
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[] [Geneticist Adam Rutherford on how eugenics, 'Darwin's monster,' took over the world](
[Geneticist Adam Rutherford on how eugenics, 'Darwin's monster,' took over the world]( (Adam Rutherford and Stephan Jakubowski)
In Adam Rutherford’s new book "Control: The Dark History and Troubling Present of Eugenics," (W.W. Norton & Company, 2022) the British geneticist and science writer time travels to the very beginning of what he calls "a defining idea of the 20th century" to explain its persistent hold on our present. Live Science spoke with him about how eugenics originated, why it failed, and why he believes it still lives with us now. Full Story: [Live Science]( (4/6) [] COVID-19
[] [China must share data on COVID-19's origins 'immediately,' WHO scientist demands](
[China must share data on COVID-19's origins 'immediately,' WHO scientist demands]( (PIERRE ALBOUY / Contributor via Getty Images)
Scientists in China collected key coronavirus data in 2020 from a market in Wuhan — ground zero of the first reported outbreak of COVID-19 — but didn't share the raw data publicly until March 2023. And experts suspect that China has much more data from the early pandemic that "have yet to be shared" with the global research community. Full Story: [Live Science]( (4/6) [] Climate Change
[] [Baseball home runs could increase by 10% in the next 80 years. Here's why](
[Baseball home runs could increase by 10% in the next 80 years. Here's why]( (Randy Faris via Getty Images)
Home runs are becoming more frequent in Major League Baseball (MLB) due to climate change, a new study finds. "There's a very clear physical mechanism at play in which warmer temperatures reduce the density of air," one of the study's co-authors said. Full Story: [Live Science]( (4/7) [] Astronomy & Astrophysics
[] [Strange radio bursts that outshine entire galaxies may come from colliding neutron stars, new study suggests](
[Strange radio bursts that outshine entire galaxies may come from colliding neutron stars, new study suggests]( (Robin Dienel/Carnegie Institution for Science)
For the first time, astronomers have linked mysterious pulses of energy called fast radio bursts (FRBs) with the ripples in space-time emitted by collapsed, colliding stars. The findings propose a new explanation for FRBs, which have vexed scientists for more than a decade. Full Story: [Live Science]( (4/6) [] Your Brain
[] [Most methods for squashing conspiracy theories don't work, study finds. Here's what does.](
[Most methods for squashing conspiracy theories don't work, study finds. Here's what does.]( (Guy Smallman / Contributor via Getty Images)
Debunking conspiracy theories with counterarguments is often a fruitless effort — but according to a new scientific review, there may be alternative strategies that can successfully fend off conspiratorial beliefs. The review doesn't reveal "a silver bullet" for countering conspiracy theories, one of the review authors said, but "we have found some interesting avenues for future research that we should follow up." Full Story: [Live Science]( (4/6) [] Daily Quiz
[] Fast radio bursts are massive blasts of radio energy that can outshine every star in an entire galaxy combined. How long do they typically last?
(Learn the answer [here]() [Vote]( [About a day]( [Vote]( [Several hours]( [Vote]( [A few minutes]( [Vote]( [Fractions of a second](
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