A diagram showing the molten layers of the Earth and magnetic field lines around its outside

Part of Earth’s core has switched directions. And nobody really knows why

The event could be part of a natural cycle in iron flows that give Earth its protect magnetic field
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Photo of someone in a pair of yellow socks standing on a blue set of scales.

The hidden rules of appetite that are ruining your weight loss plans

Obesity is on the rise, but as we blame our unhealthy food-ridden environment and look to wonder drugs to get rid of unwanted fat, what role do our genetics play?
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Issue 433 of BBC Science Focus is on sale from 20 May 2026

New issue: Inside a Black Hole

At this point in time, black holes feel… inescapable. I’m not talking about their gravitational pull, but rather how every week seems to bring the publication of a new paper about these cosmic monsters. For such enigmatic objects, we hear an awful lot about them. This is mostly thanks to the discovery, made a little over 10 years ago, that we could detect and measure gravitational waves. When this happened, we found a new way to look at the Universe. Until then, we had relied on various types of sensors to collect light (X-rays, visible light, radio waves and so on) or particles, such as cosmic rays, to examine the Universe. All of which, famously, tell us almost nothing about black holes. But then, on 14 September 2015, we picked up the signal created by two black holes spiralling around each other and merging. The event didn’t create a flash or a bang; instead, it created a ripple in spacetime that surged towards us at the speed of light. Here on Earth, the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory (LIGO) picked up this vibration in the fabric of spacetime and, in doing so, gave us a new way to probe the Universe – and a means to investigate the behaviour of black holes. Fast forward to today, and LIGO and its new partners – the Virgo interferometer in Italy and the Kamioka Gravitational Wave Detector (KAGRA) in Japan – have become black hole hunters, tracking 300 mergers between them. The signals received and the measurements taken are slowly disrobing black holes of their secrecy. By analysing these signals, scientists can determine how a black hole formed, its mass and spin, its energy output and much more. We’ve discovered black holes are much bigger and much more common than we thought, and that there might be different generations spread throughout the Universe. And yet, we still haven’t been able to peer inside one. That final frontier still remains… or does it? Read this issue to find out.
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Photo of a model globe spinning so fast you cannot make out any countries or continents

What speed am I travelling, right now?

Turns out, it is much more difficult than you might imagine to accurately assess how quickly you're moving through space
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Photo of 35m-tall (115ft) towers in the Amazon rainforest

The $50m time-travelling gamble to save the Amazon rainforest

An ambitious project about to get underway intends to see how the trees will respond to the CO2 levels of the future
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Stonehenge at twilight

We may have just cracked one of Stonehenge's greatest mysteries

A glacier may have carried the site’s massive Altar Stone part of the way from Scotland
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cholesterol in the artery

Which country in the world has the lowest cholesterol levels?

What 460 million tests tell us about diet, genetics and your heart
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skincare bottle tops framed around picture in natural sunlight

The surprising truth behind Korea's most effective skincare products

Is this new wave of skincare really better formulated and more effective than Western products?
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