Oil-Water Mix is Possible, New Study Says

Water from a fountain is seen in Mexico city, on World Water
Day March 22, 2010. REUTERS/Eliana Aponte
Water from a fountain is seen in Mexico city, on World Water Day March 22, 2010. REUTERS/Eliana Aponte
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Oil-Water Mix is Possible, New Study Says

Water from a fountain is seen in Mexico city, on World Water
Day March 22, 2010. REUTERS/Eliana Aponte
Water from a fountain is seen in Mexico city, on World Water Day March 22, 2010. REUTERS/Eliana Aponte

Common experience tells us that oil and water do not mix. Yet, it turns out that they can mix when oil is dispersed as small droplets in water. This strange behavior has long vexed scientists because there is no explanation for it.

A team from the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) and Italy’s International Centre for Theoretical Physics (ICTP) scientists have studied this question using novel optical technology and discovered the mechanism by which these two neutral and immiscible compounds can in fact mix together and form emulsions. The answer lies in the electrical charge distribution at the interface.

Indeed, oil and water segregate from one another when simply mixed. However, droplets of oil with sizes less than 1 micron (1 millionth of a meter) form in pure water and continue to exist for several weeks or months. For more than hundred years, chemists have wondered about this question: How can tiny oil droplets exist in water without any stabilizing molecules?

It turns out that the answer to this longstanding puzzle lies at the interface between oil droplets and water. Water molecules prefer to donate and accept electrical charges from their neighbors via an interaction known as hydrogen bonding. However, when they are close to the oil molecules at the droplet surface, they can no longer find enough water neighbors to hydrogen bond with. Instead, these water molecules donate their imbalanced electrical charges to the oil molecules at the droplet surface.

The study, published in the journal Science on November 10, reveals that the water-oil interaction occurs via a so-called improper hydrogen bond. This is a weak hydrogen bond between oil and water, and although weak – many of these will stabilize the droplet.

To unravel this mechanism, the team used an ultrafast optical technique. Two ultrashort laser pulses were overlapped on a mixture of oil droplets and water. When the researchers do this, new photons are generated and scattered from the droplet interface. These photons have the sum frequency of the two incoming laser beams and report on the vibrational bonds at the interface, that is the motion of atoms within interfacial molecules. This tells us about the structure and the interactions between oil and water.

“On the molecular scale, the interface between oil droplets and water has strong similarities with interfaces involved in protein folding or biological membrane formation. Therefore, these findings about the structure of oil droplet/water interface not only satisfy our curiosity about the intricate complexities of water, but also have implications for understanding interactions throughout biology and chemistry,” explained Prof. Sylvie Roke from the EPFL, in a report published on the institute’s website.



Baboon Siblings Get Jealous Just Like Human Kids, Scientists Find 

Anubis Baboons eat in their enclosure at the French CNRS’ (National Center for Scientific Research) primatology center where various monkey species are raised for the entire French scientific community in Rousset, southeastern France, on November 6, 2025. (AFP) 
Anubis Baboons eat in their enclosure at the French CNRS’ (National Center for Scientific Research) primatology center where various monkey species are raised for the entire French scientific community in Rousset, southeastern France, on November 6, 2025. (AFP) 
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Baboon Siblings Get Jealous Just Like Human Kids, Scientists Find 

Anubis Baboons eat in their enclosure at the French CNRS’ (National Center for Scientific Research) primatology center where various monkey species are raised for the entire French scientific community in Rousset, southeastern France, on November 6, 2025. (AFP) 
Anubis Baboons eat in their enclosure at the French CNRS’ (National Center for Scientific Research) primatology center where various monkey species are raised for the entire French scientific community in Rousset, southeastern France, on November 6, 2025. (AFP) 

Sibling rivalry isn't just a problem for humans -- young baboons also compete for their mother's attention, scientists said on Wednesday.

The scenario is familiar for many parents: just when they finally get to share a special moment with one of their children, a little brother or sister pops up trying to get noticed.

Axelle Delaunay, an evolutionary biologist at Finland's University of Turku and lead author of a new study, told AFP that jealousy is a "very striking" emotion in humans.

However, it has been little studied among our fellow primates because jealousy is "very complicated to measure", she said.

Female primates usually only have one baby at a time, so "it was generally thought there was no real competition between siblings, because brothers and sisters are different ages and do not necessarily need their mother and her resources at the same time", Delaunay explained.

For the study, a team of researchers observed two troops of wild chacma baboons in Tsaobis Nature Park in central Namibia between August and December 2021.

There were 16 families living in the troops, with a total of 49 young siblings.

Baboons live in societies ruled by women, with the position of power handed down from mother to daughter. Males, meanwhile, leave after puberty.

Like humans, baboon infants have a long developmental period during which they maintain strong bonds with their mother.

The mothers often groom their children -- and have been known to play favorites.

So the scientists spent lots of time watching baboon mothers either resting or grooming their children.

They meticulously noted when another infant interfered with a mother's grooming by biting, slapping, crying out or more gently asking for affection.

What they observed "strikingly mirrors patterns of sibling jealousy reported in humans", according to the study published in Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.

The young baboons were more likely to interrupt their mother when she was grooming one of their siblings than when she was just resting.

The scientists also developed an index to show how the mothers played favorites, choosing to groom some kids more than others.

Delaunay pointed out that the displays of sibling jealousy did not appear to offer "many immediate benefits".

Baboon mothers only stopped grooming one of their children because of an outburst from another roughly one-fifth of the time, the scientists found.

And she only then started grooming the jealous child nine percent of the time.


Measles Cases in Europe, Central Asia Drop 75% in 2025

University students wait to receive measles vaccine at a university in Guadalajara, Mexico, February 9, 2026. REUTERS/Michelle Freyria
University students wait to receive measles vaccine at a university in Guadalajara, Mexico, February 9, 2026. REUTERS/Michelle Freyria
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Measles Cases in Europe, Central Asia Drop 75% in 2025

University students wait to receive measles vaccine at a university in Guadalajara, Mexico, February 9, 2026. REUTERS/Michelle Freyria
University students wait to receive measles vaccine at a university in Guadalajara, Mexico, February 9, 2026. REUTERS/Michelle Freyria

Measles cases across ‌Europe and Central Asia fell 75% in 2025 from a year earlier, preliminary data from 53 countries in the WHO European Region showed, though UN children's agency UNICEF and the World Health Organization warned the risk of fresh outbreaks remains.

The countries reported 33,998 measles cases in 2025, a significant drop from 127,412 cases in 2024, the agencies said.

Despite the drop, the ‌number of ‌cases in 2025 was higher than ‌in ⁠most years since ⁠2000, and several countries reported increases from 2024.

Measles cases continue to be detected in 2026 in the WHO European Region, the agency said, according to Reuters.

UNICEF regional director Regina De Dominicis said many cases could be prevented with stronger routine vaccination ⁠and faster action during outbreaks.

"Until all ‌children are reached ‌with vaccination, and hesitancy fueled by misinformation is addressed, children ‌will remain at risk of death or ‌serious illness," she said.

At a September 2025 meeting, the European Regional Verification Commission for Measles and Rubella Elimination found that the number of countries with ‌ongoing or re-established endemic measles transmission rose to 19 from 12 the year before — ⁠the ⁠region's biggest setback in recent years.

WHO regional director Hans Henri Kluge said the virus will continue to spread unless communities reach the 95% vaccination coverage needed to prevent outbreaks.

"Unless immunity gaps across all ages are closed, this highly contagious virus will keep circulating," he said.

UNICEF and WHO said they continue to work with governments and partners, including the vaccine alliance, Gavi, and the European Union to strengthen immunization, surveillance and outbreak preparedness.


British Museum to Keep Pendant Linked to Henry VIII

The Tudor Heart pendant, linked to Britain's King Henry VIII and his first wife Katherine of Aragon, which the British Museum acquired after raising 3.5 million pounds, in this undated handout image. The British Museum/Handout via REUTERS.
The Tudor Heart pendant, linked to Britain's King Henry VIII and his first wife Katherine of Aragon, which the British Museum acquired after raising 3.5 million pounds, in this undated handout image. The British Museum/Handout via REUTERS.
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British Museum to Keep Pendant Linked to Henry VIII

The Tudor Heart pendant, linked to Britain's King Henry VIII and his first wife Katherine of Aragon, which the British Museum acquired after raising 3.5 million pounds, in this undated handout image. The British Museum/Handout via REUTERS.
The Tudor Heart pendant, linked to Britain's King Henry VIII and his first wife Katherine of Aragon, which the British Museum acquired after raising 3.5 million pounds, in this undated handout image. The British Museum/Handout via REUTERS.

The British Museum has successfully raised £3.5 million ($4.8 million) to keep a gold pendant linked to King Henry VIII's marriage to his first wife, Katherine of Aragon, according to BBC.

The central London museum launched a fundraising appeal in October so it could permanently acquire the Tudor Heart, found by a metal detectorist in a Warwickshire field in 2019.

It has now announced that it reached its fundraising goal after receiving £360,000 in public donations and a string of donations from grants, trusts and arts organizations.

Museum director Nicholas Cullinan said: “The success of the campaign shows the power of history to spark the imagination and why objects like the Tudor Heart should be in a museum.”

Research led by the British Museum has revealed that the Tudor Heart pendant may have been made to celebrate the betrothal of their two-year-old daughter Princess Mary to the eight-month-old French heir-apparent in 1518.

The pendant unites the Tudor rose with Katherine's pomegranate symbol and features a banner that reads “tousiors,” the old French for “always.”

After it was found, the pendant was reported under the Treasure Act 1996, which gives museums and galleries in England a chance to acquire historical objects and put them on display.

In order to put the pendant on permanent display, the museum had to pay a reward to the metal detectorist who made the discovery and the owner of the land it was found on.

The museum was keen to keep the Tudor Heart as it believed that few artifacts related to Henry VIII's marriage to Katherine of Aragon have survived.

Since the appeal, it said, more than 45,000 members of the public had contributed to the cause, helping it raise just over 10% of its £3.5 million goal.

It also received £1.75 million from The National Heritage Memorial Fund, which aims to save the UK's most outstanding, at-risk heritage treasures.

Other donors include the charity Art Fund, the Julia Rausing Trust and The American Friends of the British Museum.

Cullinan told BBC Radio 4's Today program: “The fact 45,000 members of the public have got behind this and donated money to keep it on the country on public display shows the enthusiasm for this object - it really is unique.”