Hybrid working, robot fast food workers, and the rapid acceleration of NFTs are just the beginning.
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Based on the atoms that they're made out of, the innermost planet should always be the densest. Here's why Earth beats Mercury, hands down.
Some neuroscientists question whether the body can “keep score” of anything in a meaningful way.
Can two planets stably share the same orbit? Conventional wisdom says no, but a look at Saturn's moons might tell a different story.
Data from NASA, ESA, and Roscosmos suggest that long durations in space cause changes in the brain, some of which are linked to vision problems.
No family is immune to money conflicts, no matter how much they love each other. Here’s what to look out for.
New tech is a double-edged sword. Integration can be expensive and perilous: Mess up the adoption and jobs are on the line.
In our Universe, matter is made of particles, while antimatter is made of antiparticles. But sometimes, the physical lines get real blurry.
Red dwarf stars were supposed to be inhospitable. But TOI-700, now with at least two potentially habitable worlds, is quite the exception.
American students are being compelled to specialize earlier and earlier. Here's what it takes to build a successful physics foundation.
Memories aren’t mental recordings, but pliable information we can use to better manage the present and conjure future possibilities.
Want to write a time-travel story? Do so at your own risk.
With such a vast Universe and raw ingredients that seem to be everywhere, could it really be possible that humanity is truly alone?
There's a limit to how large planets can be, and it's only about double the radius of Jupiter. At least, so far.
Bears, chimps, or humans? A track of five poorly preserved footsteps at Laetoli has puzzled paleontologists for decades. Now, a research paper from Nature claims to have solved the mystery.
Mozart's Sonata for Two Pianos in D Major (K448) can help reduce seizures in epilepsy patients.
For years and over three separate experiments, "lepton universality" appeared to violate the Standard Model. LHCb at last proved otherwise.
Daydreaming can be a pleasant pastime, but people who suffer from maladaptive daydreaming are trapped by their fantasies.
How would you feel about working like a Lutheran or a Cistercian?
Benjamin Breen on his greatest revelations while writing about the birth of psychedelic science.
We all spend way too much time worrying what other people think of us — it’s time to cut loose.
One player’s pawn is another’s farmer. And at one time, the queen was a rather powerless virgin.
The mismatch between theory and experiment is anything but certain. The most exciting moments in a scientist’s life occur when you get a result that defies your expectations. Whether you’re a […]
A vertical map might better represent a world dominated by China and determined by shipping routes across the iceless Arctic.
Nietzsche both wished he was as stupid as a cow so he wouldn’t have to contemplate existence, and pitied cows for being so stupid that they couldn’t contemplate existence.
The science fiction dream of a traversable wormhole is no closer to reality, despite a quantum computer's suggestive simulation.
In the early stages of the hot Big Bang, matter and antimatter were (almost) balanced. After a brief while, matter won out. Here's how.
It’s about 7.6 million times faster than what you probably have at home.