Ars Technica highlights overlooked science stories from April

Ars Technica has compiled six intriguing scientific discoveries that nearly escaped notice. The roundup covers dolphin swimming physics, Roman ship repairs, and mushroom communication via urine. Published on May 2, these stories span physics, archaeology, and biology.

In a monthly feature, Ars Technica spotlighted research from April that might have gone under the radar. Among the highlights, Japanese scientists at the University of Osaka used supercomputer simulations to explain dolphin speed. They found that large vortex rings from tail flaps generate most thrust, while smaller vortices are turbulent byproducts. 'Our results show that the hierarchy of vortices in turbulence is crucial for understanding dolphin swimming,' said co-author Susumu Goto. The team aims to apply this to underwater robots, as detailed in Physical Review Fluids (2026).

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Illustration of zebrafish with glowing brain activity patterns approaching another fish in an aquarium.
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Study finds brain-wide activity in zebrafish predicts social approach seconds before movement

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Researchers at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem report that a coordinated pattern of brain activity emerges several seconds before zebrafish swim toward another fish, and that the strength of the signal is linked to individual differences in sociability.

Researchers have found a way to alter the direction of energy flow in turbulence, challenging a theory established in 1941. The work, conducted at the University of Pittsburgh with Italian collaborators, was published in Science Advances in 2025.

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Northwestern University researchers report they have printed flexible “artificial neurons” that generate realistic electrical spike patterns and can trigger responses in living mouse brain tissue. The team says the work, published April 15 in Nature Nanotechnology, could help advance brain-machine interfaces and more energy-efficient, brain-inspired computing.

Scientists have determined that structures once seen as traces of tiny animals in 540-million-year-old Brazilian rocks are actually fossilized communities of bacteria and algae. The reexamination uses advanced imaging to reveal preserved cells and organic material.

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Two Chinese researchers have recommended the use of wave-powered autonomous vessels for long-term maritime patrols and monitoring in distant waters including the South China Sea.

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