Bill Gerstenmaier, head of NASA's human spaceflight programs, speaks April 8 during a meeting at the Space Symposium in Colorado Springs. Credit: NASA/Aubrey Gemignani. A senior NASA official said Tuesday that the Space Launch System, a huge ...
In 1980, a Buddhist monk in Tibet entered a sacred cave to pray. On the floor, he found half of a human jawbone, studded with two teeth. A team of scientists on Wednesday reported that the fossil belonged to a 160,000-year-old Denisovan, a member of a ...
Human activity was changing the Earth's drought and rainfall patterns as far back as the early 20th century, new research shows. Drying in many regions, the researchers suggested, will get worse, with sobering implications for feeding the planet's billions of ...
By Ed Ricciuti. Scientists seeking the off-season whereabouts of a group of insects called psyllids have found that what the insects eat suggests where they ate it. Such analysis may enable researchers to pinpoint areas from which psyllid pests colonize ...
The sun radiates far more high-frequency light than expected, raising questions about unknown features of the sun's magnetic field and the possibility of even more exotic physics. Art for "The Sun Is Stranger Than Astrophysicists Imagined". Gamma radiation ...
Hello, Yinzer! At 8:23 a.m. Wednesday, the 6-foot, 10-inch-long mako shark pinged hundreds of miles off the coast of Melbourne. And it's the first time the 255-pound shark pinged here, according to its track record on Ocearch. Previous pings show Yinzer ...
Scientists have discovered a new method for quickly and efficiently mapping the vast network of connections among neurons in the brain. Researchers combined infrared laser stimulation techniques with functional magnetic resonance imaging in animals to ...
On Wednesday, April 10th, the world was treated to something unprecedented - the first-ever image of a black hole! Specifically, the image captured the Supermassive Black Hole (SMBH) at the center of M87 (aka. Virgo A), a supergiant elliptical galaxy in the ...
(CN) – A chance encounter in 2013 between a professor and a small cube of uranium kickstarted a new look into the scientific goals of WWII-era Germany and the progress of the German nuclear program. Timothy Koeth, an associate research professor at the ...
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