Overweight woman measuring her waist with a tape measure.

The 6 most important lessons about belly fat (and how to lose it)

It’s the riskiest type of fat to carry, but scientists have been studying belly fat for decades. Here’s what you can glean from their findings to improve your abdominal health
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Illustration of the early Universe and an ancient star, lots of blues and pinks

The search for the Universe's first stars just got a lot stranger

They shaped the Universe, yet the first stars ever born continue to evade the searches of astronomers like Dr Emma Chapman
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Mandelbrot Set image.

The two numbers that could solve maths' biggest mysteries

It’s one of modern mathematics’ most challenging problems. How close are we to solving the Mandelbrot set’s final obstacle?
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Everest at Sunset - ice and snow on the mountains of Everest from Kala Patar - Mount Everest Summit

Why are there marine fossils at the top of Mount Everest?

Explorers keep finding marine life fossils at the top of Mount Everest. As weird as that sounds, there's a perfectly good reason why
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Issue 429 of BBC Science Focus Magazine is on sale from 27 January 2026

New issue: The Mystery of Free Will

There’s a growing school of thought in neuroscience that argues every action is predetermined, or at least highly probable. That my actions are just the sum of biological and environmental interactions outside of my control. Roughly speaking, the idea is that electricity pinballs between my ears, bouncing around the memories and concepts I hold there without my being conscious of it, before arriving at a series of outputs that prime my fingers to type this very sentence. And only then, do I become aware of ‘deciding’ what I want to write. Action precedes thought, in other words. This isn’t just a theory – there’s evidence to back it up. It seems that, in certain scenarios, neurons controlling your arms and fingers are ready to fire before those involved in conscious thought are fully active. I’m skipping over a mountain of philosophy and psychology, but you get the picture. If, like me, this idea leaves you feeling a little uneasy, maybe this will help. Neuroscience has gotten incredibly close to the minutiae of the brain in the last two decades, but it hasn’t yet wrestled with the big picture. The discipline can tie different actions to different parts of the brain, but it can’t explain why it feels good to spontaneously dip your hand in a cold, clear river, for example. My point is, neuroscience is uncovering all kinds of fascinating oddities about how the brain works, but we’re a long way away from a true understanding of how this adds up. Does free will actually exist?
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Nuclear explosion and atomic mushroom cloud

What would a nuclear meltdown on the Moon be like?

With NASA announcing plans to build a nuclear reactor on the Moon, what would happen if a meltdown strikes?
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Illustration of near-death experience

We're finally learning what it's like to die. And it's not as bad as you think...

What does dying feel like? By studying patients who’ve suffered near-death experiences, scientists are one step closer to finding out what happens in our brains during our last moments
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Vibrant conceptual 3D image showcasing multiple red chatbot icons designed as square boxes featuring pixelated eyes and mouths on their screens, each with two antennas.

The world’s first AI-only social media is seriously weird. The next may be even stranger

Millions of AI agents are chatting and posting on a social media site where humans can only observe. Soon, we won’t understand a word
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Illustration of a person inhaling brightly coloured circles representing microplastics going into their stomach

The simple, science-backed way to help clear microplastics from your body

All of us are ingesting microplastics. Could dietary fibre help us get it out?
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