It’s not about fairness. It’s about using every possible advantage.
Search Results
You searched for: Water
The answer is set to change in the year 2113, a recent estimate suggests.
This technological feat changes our cosmic history.
Physicists have yet to pinpoint the hypothetical matter that keeps galaxies from flying apart. Now they have a new focus.
The answer may lie in the particular way sand forms on Titan.
Life largely owes its existence to this equation. Be sure to hug your house plant today.
A Harvard astronomer went to the bottom of the ocean, claiming he recovered alien technology. But what does the science actually indicate?
If you want to have foamy beer inside the comfort of your own home, you need to invest in a special nucleated glass.
There’s an extremely good chance that there is, or at least was, life on Mars. But is it native to Mars, or did it originate from Earth?
From hellishly hot planets to water worlds, some distant planets are like nothing in our Solar System.
Beer’s flavor begins to change as soon as it is packaged. Are cans or bottles better at preserving flavor?
On Nov. 13, 1946, a scientist dropped crushed dry ice from a plane into supercooled stratus clouds.
Smarter building materials can control indoor temperatures without external power.
How the simple act of watching twilight can radically transform our perception of the world and our role within it.
The road from Kant to modern cognitive psychology has taught us much about our mental filtering systems.
With sea levels rising, the Dutch are pondering floating cities — while also exporting their engineering know-how to turn a tidy profit.
Forget about Tinkerbell.
There may be more energy in methane hydrates than in all the world’s oil, coal, and gas combined. It could be the perfect “bridge fuel” to a clean energy future.
Instead of digging for metals, we could extract them from salty, subterranean water.
It was originally recorded in the 1970s by cognitive psychologists Harry McGurk and John MacDonald.
Beef production is largely responsible for greenhouse gas emissions from the food system.
Chemists could replace bubbling flasks with tumbling ball mills.
Are hardened wood knives and nails coming to a store near you?
Could the prevalence of flood myths around the world tell us something about early human migration or even the way our brains work?
One book will gather all topics on the search for life in the Cosmos.
Forensics has reached the final frontier, and could be used to solve future space accidents—or crimes.
It may seem as though top performers are always on, but the secret to their success is taking the time to recharge.