science
Topics and developments in science and medicine, presented by Futurism.
M4 MacBook Air vs. M5 MacBook Pro: Which Apple Laptop Is Worth Your Money in 2025?
Apple’s MacBook lineup has never looked sharper—or more confusing. With the launch of the M4 MacBook Air and M5 MacBook Pro, buyers in 2025 are faced with a classic Apple dilemma: should you choose the ultra-portable Air or invest in the powerhouse Pro? Both are cutting-edge machines with Apple Silicon chips, remarkable efficiency, and elegant design, but they serve very different audiences.
By NextGen Mobile Tech3 months ago in Futurism
Medical Writing Market Growth, Segments & Forecast 2025–2033. AI-Generated.
Global Medical Writing Industry Overview The global Medical Writing Market is forecast to expand from US$ 4.66 billion in 2024 to US$ 12.12 billion by 2033, registering a robust CAGR of 11.20% between 2025 and 2033, according to Renub Research.
By jaiklin Fanandish3 months ago in Futurism
United States Assisted Reproductive Technology Market Size, Growth & Forecast 2025–2033. AI-Generated.
United States Assisted Reproductive Technology Market Overview The United States Assisted Reproductive Technology (ART) Market is projected to reach US$ 9.31 billion by 2033, rising from US$ 6.01 billion in 2024, with a CAGR of 4.98% during 2025–2033, according to Renub Research.
By Marthan Sir3 months ago in Futurism
Xiaomi 17 Pro Max vs Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra — Which flagship wins in 2025?
The flagship battle in late-2025 is a heavyweight match: Xiaomi’s 17 Pro Max arrives as a bold, battery-centric, dual-screen challenger while Samsung’s Galaxy S25 Ultra refines an already dominant formula with advanced AI, a pro-grade camera system, and a sleeker, titanium build. If you’re choosing between the two, here’s a complete, SEO-friendly comparison that covers displays, cameras, performance, battery, software, real-world use, pros & cons, and FAQs to help you pick the right phone.
By NextGen Mobile Tech3 months ago in Futurism
Apple iPad Pro 13-inch (M5) Review — Redefining the Future of Tablets
When Apple first launched the iPad Pro, it was clear that the company wanted to bridge the gap between tablet and laptop. Over the years, each generation has pushed that line further — but the new Apple iPad Pro 13-inch (M5) completely redraws it. With the blazing-fast M5 chip, Ultra Retina XDR display, Apple Intelligence integration, and iPadOS 26, this model doesn’t just refine the iPad experience — it reinvents it.
By NextGen Mobile Tech3 months ago in Futurism
Rebel Worlds: Exoplanets with Reverse Rotation and Bizarre Atmospheres
When astronomers began discovering planets beyond our Solar System in the 1990s, most expected to find familiar worlds — something like a Hot Jupiter here, a cold Neptune there, maybe the occasional rocky Earth-twin. Instead, the universe responded with a cosmic smirk and delivered a catalog of planets so strange that even science fiction writers would hesitate to invent them. Among the most mind-bending of these discoveries are exoplanets with reverse (retrograde) rotation and wildly abnormal atmospheres — worlds that defy planetary logic and challenge our understanding of physics.
By Holianyk Ihor3 months ago in Futurism
Nuclear Engines for the Journey to Mars: Why NTR and NEP May Change Everything
For decades, Mars has been the big red prize of human space exploration. We’ve landed rovers, taken selfies on its dusty plains, and mapped its canyons and craters in high resolution. And yet, no human has ever set foot there. The biggest obstacle isn’t distance itself — it’s time. With today’s chemical rockets, a crewed flight to Mars would take six to nine long months one way, and the entire mission could stretch to two or even three years. That means more radiation exposure, more psychological pressure, more supplies, and more risk.
By Holianyk Ihor3 months ago in Futurism
How quark-gluon plasma is studied in the laboratory?
Recreating conditions similar to the early universe is extremely difficult. However, physicists have learned how to create tiny volumes of quark-gluon plasma using large particle accelerators, heavy ion colliders. The idea is to accelerate two heavy atomic nuclei to relativistic speeds and collide them head-on. At the same time, the energy of the collision is concentrated in a small volume – a microscopic "fire layer" of ultra-high temperature and density is formed, in which ordinary nuclear matter "melts" for a moment and quark-gluon plasma arises.
By Olaf Podolski3 months ago in Futurism
Scientists Discover a Whole New Way Neurons Communicate — and It Could Rewrite Neuroscience
For more than a century, scientists believed they had a solid understanding of how the brain’s billions of neurons talk to each other. Messages flowed through synapses, where chemical messengers leapt microscopic gaps, or through electrical junctions that directly linked cells. But a team of researchers at Case Western Reserve University may have just found an entirely new kind of connection — one that could reshape how we think about brain activity and consciousness itself.
By Tech Horizons3 months ago in Futurism
Scientists Unlock a 100-Year-Old Quantum Secret That Could Supercharge Solar Power
For more than a century, scientists have chased the dream of turning sunlight into limitless clean energy. Now, a team of researchers from the University of Cambridge may have uncovered a missing piece of that dream — a discovery rooted in a 100-year-old quantum puzzle that could revolutionize the way solar panels work.
By Tech Horizons3 months ago in Futurism











