Mike Marcum didn’t have a lab, funding, or a PhD. Just a pile of salvaged electronics — and a theory. One night in Missouri, he fired up his homemade device. It formed a vortex. He tossed in a screw.
Noah Wyle and his castmates turned one harrowing day at an E.R. into an unforgettable season of television. Can they do it ...
Tampa Bay residents are no stranger to the fickle whims of weather. Sudden summer rainstorms often lead to cursing a ...
From a rocky trade and political relationship with the U.S. to electoral change at Calgary city hall and everything else in ...
For the first time, scientists have reconstructed the ancient genomes of human betaherpesvirus 6A and 6B (HHV-6A/B) from ...
Texas-based Celestis Inc., the space burial remembrance company that has made a name for itself delivering cremated remains ...
Xu Wang, senior researcher at the lab and a CU Boulder physics lecturer, is leading the DUSTER proposal. He said in the lab’s ...
Live Science spoke with Dr. Joe Alexander of NTT Research about "digital twins" and the development of an autonomous device ...
So here, as ever, are my ten best reads of 2025, in no particular order as the say on the game shows, with my top pick at the ...
Between computational design, advanced craftsmanship, and biological processes, Joris Laarman’s work transforms materials, ...