At North Bay Science Discovery Day oin Santa Rosa, n March 7, Alyssa Huang plans to do more than run a booth. She wants to ...
A wave of recent research is forcing scientists to confront an uncomfortable reality: the air filling homes, offices, and city streets carries invisible plastic particles and ultrafine pollutants that ...
Just how small can a QR code be? Small enough that it can only be recognized with an electron microscope. A research team at TU Wien, working together with the data storage technology company Cerabyte ...
A European project calls for help to verify whether carbon quantum dots are really able to sense chemicals in cells.
Larry Carbone offers an insider's perspective on the ethics of using animals in invasive research, the need for more ...
NASA's Curiosity rover, which launched in 2011 from Florida, found signs of organic material that on Earth is most often ...
Gabriel Gomes built an agent that turns plain English into physical experiments, enabling research that humans alone could never sustain ...
This mind-bending relativity illusion has never been seen—until now ...
The researchers found they could hack the AI’s creativity by turning this knob. As they cranked the temperature up, the ...
Many technological applications, such as sensors and batteries, greatly rely on electrochemical reactions. Improving these technologies depends on understanding how electrochemical reactions work.
The Arcelor Mittal Science Centre in Saldanha hosted the first of three professional development training programs for ...
Using gold flakes, salt water, and light, scientists have made the universe’s invisible binding forces visible in color. The discovery opens new possibilities for studying how matter organizes itself ...