Grab Your Telescope: Jupiter Will Shine Its Brightest Tonight
Jupiter is in opposition today, meaning it’s exactly opposite the sun in the sky, like the Moon when it’s full.
Jupiter is in opposition today, meaning it’s exactly opposite the sun in the sky, like the Moon when it’s full.
These findings confirm older research that suggests moon dust could be hazardous to human beings' health.
Astrology is not science, but taking a look at the real constellation your zodiac sign is named after is a great way to see some of the incredible objects that populate our universe.
Scientists have created time crystals - structures where atoms prefer to exist in certain intervals of time - out of ammonium dihydrogen phosphate, a chemical commonly found in fertilisers and fire extinguishers.
European mistletoe seems to survive without a protein indispensable for life called “complex I,” two independent teams of researchers reported yesterday.
I’m sorry, Boeing, but it sounds like you’re trying to compensate for something.
Quantum key distribution could one day be useful for sharing secure things like genetic data or government data.
The portable nuclear fission reactor—a device that could one day power bases on Mars—has passed initial testing with flying colours.
The paper deals with the nature of the cosmos, and delves into figuring out how many possible multiverses there could be with physics similar to ours.
It’s also teaching us about the universe.
A recent paper suggests that some strong gravitational force might have sent ripples through our galaxy between 300 million and 900 million years ago.
It’s probably not the impending doom it sounds like
The Trace Gas Orbiter might be taking some incredible images, but it also has a very important scientific mission to carry out.
Experimenters around the world are trying to harness perhaps the most perplexing property in physics: quantum entanglement, which Einstein called “spooky action at a distance.”
It shouldn’t be AI’s job to replace scientists, but instead help them manage the incredible amounts of data.
That’s important not just to our own planet’s story, but to others’, too.