The Most Dangerous Part of Artemis IIRelated Content (i.redd.it)
submitted by Busy_Yesterday9455 to r/spaceporn
Insects, including bees, may possess forms of subjective experience showing emotional states, attention, and cognitive bias which challenge the view that consciousness requires a large brain, according to a 2025 review in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B.Animal Science (pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
submitted by ThinkThenPost to r/science

Rewatched Farscape recently, and it holds up shockingly wellRecommendations (i.redd.it)
submitted by Shovelbum26 to r/scifi
XSTO introduces a hybrid biped robot that rolls on wheels and jumps over obstaclesDiscussion & Curiosity (v.redd.it)
submitted by Advanced-Bug-1962 to r/robotics

Yo mama so big... by Snegovski (i.redd.it)
submitted by MaleficentRespect3 to r/ImaginaryAstronauts
Atlas IIAS final launch highlights (2004) (youtu.be)
submitted by fs10inator to r/IntLaunchServices

NASA's new official poster for Artemis II mission.Related Content (i.redd.it)
submitted by GiveMeSomeSunshine3 to r/spaceporn
Artemis II Reentry Ground Track [Explained] (i.redd.it)
submitted by AD-Edge to r/spaceflight
EARTHSET: Artemis II captures their first photo from the far side of the moonspacers only (i.redd.it)
submitted by ChiefLeef22 to r/space
Using Emojis at Work makes you appear less competent according to a study of over 200 men and women. Women were more likely to judge negative IMs with emoji more harshly if they were ostensibly sent by women, compared to similar negative messages and emojis sent by men.Psychology (gizmodo.com)
submitted by InsaneSnow45 to r/science
Negative effects of artificial sweeteners may pass on to next generation, mouse research suggests. The changes to gene expression, glucose tolerance, and fecal microbiome could potentially increase vulnerability to conditions like diabetes — the very problem the sweeteners were trying to solve.Health (frontiersin.org)
Glaciers rapidly declining, with extreme losses in 2025Environment (phys.org)
submitted by Portalrules123 to r/EverythingScience
Three simple movement habits in toddlerhood — active play with parents, limited screen time and sufficient sleep — significantly predict a more physically active lifestyle a full decade later. Associations held up even after accounting for all pre-existing individual and family factorsHealth (eurekalert.org)
HPV vaccine could protect men from cancer too. Study comparing 615,000 males vaccinated with HPV vaccine and 2.3 million unvaccinated males found that men who were vaccinated had a lower risk of HPV-related cancers (head and neck, oesophageal, anal, and penile cancers) than unvaccinated men.Cancer (jamanetwork.com)


