All forms of energy affect the expanding Universe. But if matter and radiation slow the expansion down, how does dark energy speed it up?
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Whether in Russia or China, the secret police are defined by their unquestioning loyalty — as well as by their poor career prospects.
Scientists have been chasing the dream of harnessing the reactions that power the Sun since the dawn of the atomic era. Interest, and investment, in the carbon-free energy source is heating up.
The first supernova ever discovered through its X-rays has an enormously powerful engine at its core. It’s unlike anything ever seen.
Warm relationships protect your mind and body from the slings and arrows of life.
Smoke taint from wildfires is gross, even to wine amateurs.
There might be a hard limit to our knowledge of the Universe.
Eyes with lower pigment (blue or grey eyes) don’t need to absorb as much light as brown or dark eyes before this information reaches the retinal cells. This might provide light-eyed people with some resilience to SAD.
The Schumann resonances are the background hum of the entire planet. But they don’t affect humans in any way.
There’s a whole lotta shakin’ goin’ on beneath the single plate of Mars.
You can lead an overconfident chatbot to expert knowledge, but can it actually learn and assimilate new information?
Created in the 1880s, “Ivan the Terrible and His Son Ivan,” which depicts a father murdering his son, divides Russians to this day.
This could become a standard feature one day.
The crisis of the Anthropocene challenges our traditional narratives and myths about humanity’s place in the world. Citizen science can help.
Social media has made yelling past each other all the easier.
Contrary to common experience, not everything needs a medium to travel through. Overcoming that assumption removes the need for an aether.
Jotform CEO Aytekin Tank explains how he successfully embraced and deployed AI.
Our huge, expanding Universe may truly be infinite. But if the set of possible quantum outcomes is also infinite, which “infinity” wins?
After 15 years of monitoring 68 objects known as millisecond pulsars, we’ve found the Universe’s background gravitational wave signal!
The popular game has a backstory rife with segregation, inequality, intellectual theft, and outlandish political theories.
Particles are everywhere, including particles from space that stream through the human body. Here’s how they prove Einstein’s relativity.
Not all stress is created equal.
These studies are only the tip of the iceberg, with adverse consequence of the time change ranging from student test scores to stock market returns.
Mesopotamian beer was not flavored with hops, and it was probably on the thick, porridgey side.
Carl Jung was one such person.
Advances in ancient DNA analysis gave researchers a new way to trace the movements of peoples across Eurasia.
2022 was another busy year in the realm of science, with groundbreaking stories spanning space, materials, medicine, and technology.
Queen Calafia seems like she could have sprung from the pages of a modern fantasy novel.
Although early Earth was a molten hellscape, once it cooled, life arose almost immediately. That original chain of life remains unbroken.
Hubble revolutionized astronomy more than once. Here’s what we can expect from the James Webb Space Telescope.