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Cardinals gathered at the Sistine Chapel yesterday, where they’ll eventually select the next pope. The decision is famously communicated through the emission of white smoke from a chimney perched on the roof of the chapel. If they haven’t reached a verdict, the smoke is black.
Interestingly, the smoke wasn’t always intended as a public signal, but became so in the late 18th century after people started scrutinising it to guess the outcome of voting. Since then, the Vatican has used several different techniques of creating smoke to give updates on the process. Mark Lorch talks us through the history and chemistry of the smoke signal.
As much of Europe celebrates VE day today, experts highlight the importance of learning from history. They explain how areas of wartime fascist resistance in Italy remain less susceptible to the far right today – and what that can teach us about today’s world. And why Stalin’s actions in Poland during the war may tell us something about Putin’s approach to Ukraine right now.
Meanwhile, your fridge might be a breeding ground for bacteria – here’s what you can do to improve it.
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Miriam Frankel
Senior Science + Technology Editor
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White smoke from the chimney on top of the Sistine Chapel (Vatican City) indicates that the Pope has been elected.
MartiBstock/Shutterstock
Mark Lorch, University of Hull
In 2013, the Vatican released their recipes for conclave smoke.
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Sell out: most Polish people felt they had been abandoned by their allies in the US and Great Britain at the Yalta Conference.
US government
Wendy Webster, University of Huddersfield
Ukrainians fear that what happened to Poland after the second world war could happen to their country.
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Members of the Partigiani Ossola, resistance fighters based in the Ossola Valley, northwest Italy.
Alamy/The History Collection
Juan Masullo, Leiden University; Simone Cremaschi, Bocconi University
Those asking how to counter the far right might look at the communities in Italy where partisan resistance was strong.
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Nicoleta Ionescu/Shutterstock
Oleksii Omelchenko, Quadram Institute; Judith Evans, London South Bank University
Your fridge might feel cold, but is it cold enough to stop bacteria? Over 50% of fridges run too warm, and most of us never check.
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World
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Natasha Lindstaedt, University of Essex
The conflict between India and Pakistan puts two of the world’s nuclear powers head to head.
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Stefan Wolff, University of Birmingham
On defence, energy and trade, Europe is now forging new partnerships to become more independent.
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Ed Turner, Aston University
Merz won confirmation of MPs in a second round of voting after becoming the first ever chancellor candidate to lose in the first round.
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Matt Barlow, University of Glasgow
The president has called it Argentina’s ‘liberation day’.
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Arts + Culture
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Hazel Hall, Edinburgh Napier University
A podcast detailing the wartime diary of 26-year-old Lorna Lloyd resonated deeply with participants of a new study.
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Clare V. Church, School of Advanced Study, University of London
Why is it that, after all these years, we continue to meet We’ll Meet Again again, and again and again?
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Benjamin Roberts, Durham University; Alan Williams, Durham University
The tin would have made a 4,000km journey to thriving markets in the east Mediterranean.
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Francesca Sobande, Cardiff University
The music and life of Black women is memorialised in mainstream media in ways that rarely recognise their wholeness and the true extent of their work’s impact.
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Michelle Pfeffer, University of Oxford
Those who predicted the death of the pope in the 16th century often put their own lives at risk.
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Barbara Tesio-Ryan, University of Edinburgh
The inventor of the lovable but imperfect Moomins created the characters and their world as a way of bringing light after the dark days of the second world war.
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Business + Economy
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Jean Chalaby, City St George's, University of London
Does Hollywood really need Trump to protect it with tariffs?
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Tom Harper, University of East London
US diplomats may do well to read some Chinese history to understand Beijing’s tactics in any trade talks.
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Matt Barlow, University of Glasgow
The president has called it Argentina’s ‘liberation day’.
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Environment
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Max Lacey-Barnacle, University of Sussex
Community Wealth Building offers a new model for economic development that can be at the heart of the UK’s transition to net zero
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Antaya March, University of Portsmouth; Stephanie Northen, University of Portsmouth
Microplastics are accumulating in our food, water, air and bodies – yet UK regulations aren’t designed to reduce them.
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Muzammal Ahmad Khan, University of the West of Scotland
Captain Planet, the superhero fighting pollution, corporate greed and environmental destruction, is back.
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Health
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David M. Evans, University of Bristol; Jonathan Beacham, University of Bristol
Obesity is rising and sugar is part of the problem. But the sugar levy isn’t a tax on people - it’s a push for industry to do better.
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Maria Teresa Borrello, University of Sunderland
Scientists test new drugs to fight silent liver damage.
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Matt Field, University of Sheffield
Addiction isn’t a brain disease – but substance use is rarely a free choice either.
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Hazel Flight, Edge Hill University
From weight loss to possible health concerns, discover the science – and controversy – behind one of the world’s most popular sugar subst | | | |