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Cosmos Magazine

Issue 95
Magazine

Cosmos Magazine is an award-winning literary science magazine, published in Australia but with a global reach. Cosmos Magazine presents the exciting world of science in a way that everyone can enjoy, with beautiful pictures and clear explanations of the latest developments. Discover the universe around you and what makes it tick.

From the Greenlight Editor

Look and listen

From the Editors

Cosmos Magazine

“Better than our most optimistic prediction” – JWST’s first images • Images of a non-descript star within our own galaxy reveal the James Webb telescope’s deep-field capabilities.

Warming up the underwater brood period • Octopuses may be congregating near warm-water vents to improve their reproductive success.

FOR NAVIGATIONAL SMARTS, AVOID A GRID-CITY CHILDHOOD

Armour for good bacteria against antibiotics • Genetically engineered probiotic protects the gut microbiome and reduces likelihood of antibiotic resistance spreading.

FOCUS: FUNGI

THE VENUS OF WILLENDORF’S LONG JOURNEY • Researchers pin the statuette’s origin to Italy or Ukraine.

Seagrass meadows store much more carbon than previously realised • Sweet secrets of seagrass ecosystems revealed in new study.

BirdBot gets a walk-up start • Robot demonstrates that avian-inspired gait is energy efficient and beautifully balanced.

WOULD YOU WEAR A T-SHIRT THAT COULD LISTEN TO YOU? • Futuristic fabrics might let your clothes eavesdrop on you.

Tyrant Lizard Emperor, King, and Queen: T-rex might be three species • New analysis of old bones suggests it’s time make way for more members of the dinosaur royal family.

HOT POTATO NEWS • Surprisingly complex potato genome finally sequenced.

Experts use model to offer radical solution to plastic waste: don’t reduce – just stop • Even reduction measures won’t stop alarming plastic pollution increase.

Sandy the pure desert dingo • International collaboration of researchers sequence the genome of the pure desert dingo.

Astronomers discover a sideways black hole • New finding calls theories of black hole formation into question.

SMALL WONDER

Printable polymers for (future) biodegradable batteries • Researchers inch towards a biodegradable way to power small devices.

WHAT WOULD IT FEEL LIKE TO PAT A DINOSAUR? • New laser imaging study gets us a step closer to answering this essential question.

MALE BIRTH CONTROL? • A non-hormonal contraceptive shows promise in male mice

Earth + warming = speedier ocean • Sixty-six million years of geological data suggests heating makes ocean currents stronger.

Mammal of the year • At last, an election you can actually get excited to vote about: Australian Mammal of the Year.

Did the biggest carnivorous dinosaur sink and swim? • Bone density analysis offers a likely answer to a hotly debated behaviour.

Testing the Dark Emu hypothesis • The next big thing in Australian archaeology is hidden in plain sight.

School of rocks • How are we here? Why is the Earth the way it is? The way life arose in our solar system remains a fascinating mystery. Beset but not daunted by kangaroo scat, this astrogeologist is piecing together the origins of life on Earth, meteorite by meteorite.

HEAVYWEIGHT PARTICLE • The announcement in April of new measurements of the W boson has particle physicists abuzz. MARTIN WHITE gets the knowledge collider up to peak energy to examine what we know and what the new W measurements might mean.

A PHYSICIST DOODLES A W BOSON TAKING A WALK

MADE TO MEASURE

HUMAN-CENTRED SOFTWARE • A world-first research project aims to build software...


Expand title description text

Formats

OverDrive Magazine

subjects

Science

Languages

English

Cosmos Magazine is an award-winning literary science magazine, published in Australia but with a global reach. Cosmos Magazine presents the exciting world of science in a way that everyone can enjoy, with beautiful pictures and clear explanations of the latest developments. Discover the universe around you and what makes it tick.

From the Greenlight Editor

Look and listen

From the Editors

Cosmos Magazine

“Better than our most optimistic prediction” – JWST’s first images • Images of a non-descript star within our own galaxy reveal the James Webb telescope’s deep-field capabilities.

Warming up the underwater brood period • Octopuses may be congregating near warm-water vents to improve their reproductive success.

FOR NAVIGATIONAL SMARTS, AVOID A GRID-CITY CHILDHOOD

Armour for good bacteria against antibiotics • Genetically engineered probiotic protects the gut microbiome and reduces likelihood of antibiotic resistance spreading.

FOCUS: FUNGI

THE VENUS OF WILLENDORF’S LONG JOURNEY • Researchers pin the statuette’s origin to Italy or Ukraine.

Seagrass meadows store much more carbon than previously realised • Sweet secrets of seagrass ecosystems revealed in new study.

BirdBot gets a walk-up start • Robot demonstrates that avian-inspired gait is energy efficient and beautifully balanced.

WOULD YOU WEAR A T-SHIRT THAT COULD LISTEN TO YOU? • Futuristic fabrics might let your clothes eavesdrop on you.

Tyrant Lizard Emperor, King, and Queen: T-rex might be three species • New analysis of old bones suggests it’s time make way for more members of the dinosaur royal family.

HOT POTATO NEWS • Surprisingly complex potato genome finally sequenced.

Experts use model to offer radical solution to plastic waste: don’t reduce – just stop • Even reduction measures won’t stop alarming plastic pollution increase.

Sandy the pure desert dingo • International collaboration of researchers sequence the genome of the pure desert dingo.

Astronomers discover a sideways black hole • New finding calls theories of black hole formation into question.

SMALL WONDER

Printable polymers for (future) biodegradable batteries • Researchers inch towards a biodegradable way to power small devices.

WHAT WOULD IT FEEL LIKE TO PAT A DINOSAUR? • New laser imaging study gets us a step closer to answering this essential question.

MALE BIRTH CONTROL? • A non-hormonal contraceptive shows promise in male mice

Earth + warming = speedier ocean • Sixty-six million years of geological data suggests heating makes ocean currents stronger.

Mammal of the year • At last, an election you can actually get excited to vote about: Australian Mammal of the Year.

Did the biggest carnivorous dinosaur sink and swim? • Bone density analysis offers a likely answer to a hotly debated behaviour.

Testing the Dark Emu hypothesis • The next big thing in Australian archaeology is hidden in plain sight.

School of rocks • How are we here? Why is the Earth the way it is? The way life arose in our solar system remains a fascinating mystery. Beset but not daunted by kangaroo scat, this astrogeologist is piecing together the origins of life on Earth, meteorite by meteorite.

HEAVYWEIGHT PARTICLE • The announcement in April of new measurements of the W boson has particle physicists abuzz. MARTIN WHITE gets the knowledge collider up to peak energy to examine what we know and what the new W measurements might mean.

A PHYSICIST DOODLES A W BOSON TAKING A WALK

MADE TO MEASURE

HUMAN-CENTRED SOFTWARE • A world-first research project aims to build software...


Expand title description text