Robots that can see around corners? New AI radar system makes it possible

Imagine if a self-driving car could spot a pedestrian before they step into view from behind a building. Engineers at the University of Pennsylvania have...

Scientists stunned by rare great white shark sighting in Spanish waters

In April 2023, fishermen off Spain’s eastern coast made an unexpected and historic catch. A juvenile great white shark, just over two meters long and...

Scientists capture a stunning “cosmic egg” as a dying star

NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope has captured a striking new image of the Egg Nebula, a rare and short-lived object formed as a star nears...

Scientists invent “smart underwear” that tracks your farts 24/7

Talking about flatulence may feel awkward, but scientists say it could reveal important clues about gut health. Researchers at the University of Maryland have developed...

Why so few planets can support life

Life needs more than water and the right temperature to exist. New research suggests that only a small number of planets ever get the chemical...

Why liquid metal could be the key to affordable green hydrogen

Scientists have developed a new way to produce clean hydrogen using sunlight and liquid metal, offering a promising path toward greener energy made directly...

Origami-inspired waveguides could make satellites lighter and easier to launch

Modern satellites rely on electromagnetic waveguides—hollow structures that carry high-power signals between components such as antennas and transmitters. Today, these waveguides are usually made from...

Dead stars may be hiding the missing mass of galaxy clusters

Galaxy clusters, the largest structures held together by gravity in the universe, may be far heavier than scientists once believed. New research suggests that much...

Life’s ingredients may have formed in frozen space, not warm water, asteroid study suggests

Scientists studying material from the asteroid Bennu have uncovered new clues about how some of life’s most basic ingredients may have formed long before...

This hair-thin glass microphone can hear electrical sparks before power failures happen

Researchers have created a microphone so thin it looks like a human hair, yet tough enough to survive temperatures as high as 1,000°C. Made entirely...

Frequent AI chat linked to higher depression risk

Artificial intelligence tools have become part of everyday life for millions of people. Many use AI at work to write emails, summarize documents, or...

This computer uses light instead of electricity—and it solves problems faster than quantum machines

Researchers at Queen's University have built a new kind of computer that uses light instead of electricity—and it works at room temperature, stays stable...

FEATURED

Physicists use electric fields to control DNA in real time

A team of physicists at McGill University has developed a new device that allows them to trap, release, and manipulate DNA molecules without ever...

Scientists find cool way to make stronger construction materials with bacteria

Scientists have discovered a cool new way to make building materials stronger and more eco-friendly, and it involves using tiny living organisms! In a paper...

Scientists discover the ancestor of all animals in fossils

A team led by UC Riverside geologists has discovered the first ancestor on the family tree that contains most familiar animals today, including humans. The...

Whales blow bubble rings at humans—and it might be a friendly hello

For the first time ever, scientists have documented humpback whales blowing perfect bubble rings during close and curious encounters with humans. Much like someone blowing...

What if we could teach photons to behave like electrons?

The next era of computing will depend on controlling light the way we now control electricity, and Stanford scientists have developed a trick that...