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Science and Tech
The way that the ancient Megalodon adapted to water temperature has important implications for modern marine creatures.
Even a tiny sliver of the Universe can reveal the cosmic story of what's out there and how it came to be the way it is today.
Michio Kaku predicts, among other things, how we'll build cities on Mars and why cancer will one day be like the common cold.
Understanding the factors behind recent growth could help us better approach inequality.
4mins
We’re wrong about what other people think - and that has harmful impacts on the next generation.
Stand Together
Where the prime meridian meets the equator, a non-existent island captures our imagination — and our non-geocoded data.
The closest star system to Earth, just over 4 light-years away, has three stars and at least one Earth-sized planet. Is it time to go there?
"I was part of the surgical team that conducted the first pig-to-human heart transplant in a living patient."
The James Webb Space Telescope could help scientists learn about the cosmic dark ages and how they ended.
In 1990, we only knew of the planets in our own Solar System. Today, the exoplanet count is more than 5000. Here's what we've learned.
Every year, scientists like George Church get better at editing the genomes of human beings. But will genome editing help or hurt us?
Salk scientists studied complex decision-making capabilities in a worm with just 302 neurons and a mouth full of teeth. It's smarter than you would think.
We have a morbid curiosity about nautical disaster stories. The Irish "Wreck Viewer" offers a window into centuries of marine misfortune.
Empty, intergalactic space is just 2.725 K: not even three degrees above absolute zero. But the Boomerang Nebula is even colder.
When we started imaging the Universe with Hubble, every star had four "spikes" coming from it. Here's why Webb will have more.
Forty Starlink satellites were destroyed earlier this year in a geomagnetic storm.
Knowing that technology would advance in the future, NASA put some moon rock samples into storage without opening them. Now, they have.
3mins
Is social media changing your memory? Here’s what the science actually says.
Syllipsimopodi bideni is small (about 12cm in length), has ten arms, suckers, fins, and a triangular pen of hard tissue inside its body for support.
The far infrared reveals both the coldest and hottest gas in the Universe, and can teach us what no other wavelength range can.