March 31, 2026
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Articles by Phys.org

Phys.org - Space

NASA returns moon rocket to pad, eyeing April 1 launch

Phys.org

NASA on Thursday began returning its towering SLS rocket and Orion spacecraft to its Florida launch pad ahead of a planned flyby of the moon, after completing necessary repairs.This post was originally published on this […]

Phys.org - Pets & Veterinary Medicine

Mind over metal: Staying wary of metal-related toxicities for pets

Phys.org

Pets encounter a variety of everyday risks, from outdoor threats like animals or parasites to physical dangers like vehicles or sharp objects and household toxins like plants or cleaners. However, many owners may underestimate the […]

Phys.org - Pets & Veterinary Medicine

Bird flu risk to Danish cattle: New tool can warn farmers before infection spreads

Phys.org

Sudden drop in milk production, thickened milk, and cows under movement restrictions. Since 2024, American farmers have had bitter experiences with the feared bird flu (H5N1), which in several cases has been introduced to cattle—and […]

Phys.org - Social Sciences

Moral metrics: Are corporate algorithms becoming our new moral authorities?

Phys.org

You check your credit score before applying for an apartment. Your fitness watch tells you whether you slept well enough. A workplace dashboard measures your productivity. Parents can buy devices that track their baby’s breathing […]

Phys.org - Social Sciences

Why the gender wealth gap is still so stubborn, and what it means for women’s well-being

Phys.org

Inequality in wealth between men and women has not always received the same attention as similar disparities in employment and earnings. This is perhaps because wealth—things like property, savings and investments—is seen as a private […]

Phys.org - Social Sciences

Workplace nature breaks may cut stress, study finds

Phys.org

With 76% of adults now reporting stress levels that impede daily function, a new Cornell study points to a low-cost intervention hiding in plain sight: nature. The study, published in March 2026 in ScienceDirect, found […]

Phys.org - Space

NASA’s Artemis missions promise a return to the moon—but when?

Phys.org

NASA’s Artemis II mission plans to fly around the moon and back this April. Four astronauts will board the mammoth Space Launch System (SLS) rocket for the test flight, spending 10 days off-Earth. They won’t […]

Phys.org - Biotechnology

Magnetic fields guide lab-grown blood vessels into precise patterns for drug testing

Phys.org

Animal studies often fail to predict human tissue responses to new drugs or newly developed therapies. Besides generating tremendous costs for clinical studies, it also raises significant ethical concerns. Therefore, novel approaches to mimicking natural […]

Phys.org - Business

How Instagram addictiveness lawsuit could reshape social media—platform design meets product liability

Phys.org

A Los Angeles courtroom is hosting what may become the most consequential legal challenge Big Tech has ever faced. This is an inflection point in the global debate over Big Tech liability: For the first […]

Phys.org - Biotechnology

Molecular enhancements help plants light up when they’re under attack

Phys.org

Imagine that plants could tell us exactly when they’re stressed, infected, or being eaten by insects, by lighting up. A new study led by Dr. Karen Sarkisyan, Head of the Synthetic Biology group at the […]

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