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Read our March 2024 Issue on Exploring the Sun!

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chiefeditor@scientificamerican.com

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Thu, Feb 22, 2024 09:01 PM

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Dear Friend of Scientific American, Are you getting excited about the ? We sure are. It will be , an

[SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN]( Dear Friend of Scientific American, Are you getting excited about the [April total solar eclipse]( We sure are. It will be [visible across most of North America]( and this map shows the path of totality, color-coded to show the [likelihood of clear skies](. This year’s eclipse will be more dramatic than the one that swept across the U.S. in 2017 because the sun was in a low point in its activity cycle then and is now [near its peak](. In our March issue cover story (and it’s a [glorious cover image]( author Becky Boyle shares what we’re learning about the sun from two very close space probes, and what scientists are looking forward to studying on the big day. We hope you enjoy the story and rich graphics and illustrations of the latest discoveries about the sun. Artificial intelligence models are trained on vast amounts of knowledge, but they are stuck inside a computer with no way to interact with the world aside from a keyboard. Robots typically don’t have vast amounts of knowledge, but they are able to move around and manipulate things in the world. What happens if you stick an [AI inside a robot body]( What could possibly go wrong? Or possibly right? Our fascinating story on merging the two technologies explores some fun applications (a robot that can figure out what to cook for dinner) and some potentially dangerous ones (what if it misunderstands a command or is weaponized). Our editorial points out the dangers and costs of cars. They contribute to climate change, pollute the air, and kill drivers and riders and pedestrians. [America’s car culture]( is a choice, and we point to dozens of policy changes that could encourage safer and healthier and less frustrating transportation options, and how to achieve them. Asthma and allergies have become much more common in kids in the past few decades. That’s likely due to less exposure to germs during early life, an idea called the “hygiene hypothesis.” New research advances that basic idea to [identify the microbes in children’s gastrointestinal tract]( that seem to be involved in allergies. Some research in clinical trials suggests that beneficial microbes could provide new treatments for allergies. Astrophysicist and artist Nia Imara studies how stars form out of clouds of swirling gas and dust. To get a handle on the problem, she [3D-prints spherical models of stellar nurseries]( that she can hold in her hand. As she explains in a story she wrote for this issue, the clouds (both the models and the ones out in the universe) contain clumps and filaments that interact at many scales and create awesome patterns. We hope you enjoy the [March issue]( of Scientific American and the rest of our stories, graphics, videos, podcasts and [more on our website](. I am wishing you clear skies for the April eclipse! Laura Helmuth Editor-in-Chief Scientific American [Read the Issue]( March Issue Highlights [The Eclipse Is Coming, and Solar Science Will Never Be the Same]( [The Eclipse Is Coming, and Solar Science Will Never Be the Same]( The upcoming total solar eclipse and a pair of new sun probes are revolutionizing scientists’ understanding of our closest star. [Read More]( [Scientists Are Putting ChatGPT Brains Inside Robot Bodies. What Could Possibly Go Wrong?]( [Scientists Are Putting ChatGPT Brains Inside Robot Bodies. What Could Possibly Go Wrong?]( The effort to give robots AI brains is revealing big practical challenges—and bigger ethical concerns. [Read More]( [Changing Car Culture Can Benefit Our Health and Our Planet]( [Changing Car Culture Can Benefit Our Health and Our Planet]( We need to rethink the American love affair with the automobile and redesign cities to reduce car pollution. [Read More]( [Helpful Gut Bacteria Seem to Reduce Allergic Disease in Kids]( [Helpful Gut Bacteria Seem to Reduce Allergic Disease in Kids]( In babies, the right combo of gut bacteria might stave off later allergies, so scientists are testing “cocktails” of helpful microbes as therapy. [Read More]( [3D-Printed Cosmic Clouds Unravel the Mysteries of Star Formation]( [3D-Printed Cosmic Clouds Unravel the Mysteries of Star Formation]( Three-dimensional printouts of stellar nurseries are helping to reveal how stars are born. [Read More]( [Scientific American March Issue]( Read the latest issue! A total solar eclipse and new space probes will reveal our star's mysteries. [Read Now]( To view this email as a web page, [go here](. You received this email because you opted-in to receive email from Scientific American. To ensure delivery please add chiefeditor@scientificamerican.com to your address book. [Unsubscribe]( [Email Preferences]( [Privacy Policy]( [Contact Us](

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