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A pivotal moment • The end of El Niño should be a spur for accelerated climate action
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Most detailed shot of a star nursery
As warm El Niño ends, what next? • After a year of driving extreme weather, the El Niño pattern in the Pacific Ocean is subsiding, but this year may not be any cooler, says James Dinneen
Just three years of high temperatures will mean we have missed 1.5°C goal
Ancient egg-laying mammals revealed • Trove of Australian fossils offers a rare glimpse of the ancient relatives of platypuses and echidnas that lived alongside the dinosaurs 100 million years ago, finds James Woodford
Tiny black holes could trace patterns inside the sun
Antiviral drug may offer treatment for hearing loss
AI can guess where landmines are most likely to be hiding
Hungry deer may have driven plants to become tinier
The quantum arrow of time • A new way to think about why time only flows in one direction has major implications for both the universe’s early period and its eventual demise, says Leah Crane
Analysis Mental health • Could anxiety or depression be ‘transmitted’ between classmates? Having one person in a school class with a mental health condition has been linked to a higher risk of such a diagnosis in their peers. But are these illnesses contagious, asks Clare Wilson
How early humans reached Australia • Excavations on the island of Timor hint at which route was used to first settle vast continent
Ants learn faster if they get a hit of caffeine
Sun’s dynamo may hide just beneath the roiling surface
Why the way bird flu spreads between cows is still a mystery
Cement without the emissions • A process that uses waste from demolished buildings could cut the climate impact of construction
Ancient viruses linked to mental health conditions
Soldiers test ancient armour to show it worked for war
Japan’s earthquake swarm may have been triggered by heavy snow
Quantum device can pick up heart signals
Cattle prefer the touch of a woman
Huge nose key to success of male proboscis monkeys
Really brief
Our forgotten oases • Ponds have long been neglected by science, but we can’t afford to ignore these nature hotspots any more, say Jeremy Biggs and Penny Williams
Field notes from space-time • Cosmic conundrums Discovering how weird black holes are made me want to be a physicist. There is still so much to learn about these strange regions, says Chanda Prescod-Weinstein
Amazing avians
Emerging Technologies Summit • Hundreds of business executives and thought leaders met at an event hosted by New Scientist in London to discuss how the latest innovations will affect their industries
Facing up to our AI future • To understand the power – and limitations – of artificial intelligence, we need information, not hype. Alex Wilkins explores what four new books offer
New Scientist recommends
The games column • Coral magic There’s nothing quite like the feel of board games, especially this colourful one involving ocean ecosystems. Opponents may take the tile you wanted and scoring is fiendishly complex, but it is a great way to relax, says Jacob Aron
Your letters
A loop in time • An experiment to send a particle back in time could...