Physics writer Emily Conover joined Science News in 2016. She has a Ph.D. in physics from the University of Chicago, where she studied the weird ways of neutrinos, tiny elementary particles that can zip straight through the Earth. She got her first taste of science writing as a AAAS Mass Media Fellow for the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. She has previously written for Science Magazine and the American Physical Society. She is a two-time winner of the D.C. Science Writers’ Association Newsbrief award.

All Stories by Emily Conover

  1. Particle Physics

    How a proton gets its spin is surprisingly complicated

    Pinning down the source of protons’ spin is surprisingly hard to do.

  2. Astronomy

    X-ray ‘chimneys’ connect the Milky Way to mysterious gamma-ray bubbles

    Two columns of X-rays that are hundreds of light-years long could explain the existence of giant bubbles of energetic light that sandwich the galaxy.

  3. Life

    Some shrimp make plasma with their claws. Now a 3-D printed claw can too

    Scientists used a replica of a shrimp claw to re-create the extreme pressures and temperatures that the animals produce underwater.

  4. Physics

    Ultraprecise atomic clocks put Einstein’s special relativity to the test

    Physics obeys the same rules no matter what direction you’re facing, a new experiment confirms.

  5. Physics

    Scientists have chilled tiny electronics to a record low temperature

    In a first, electronic chip temperatures dip below a thousandth of a degree kelvin.

  6. Physics

    Microwaved grapes make fireballs, and scientists now know why

    Electromagnetic waves bounce back and forth inside a grape, creating plasma.

  7. Life

    This spider slingshots itself at extreme speeds to catch prey

    By winding up its web like a slingshot, the slingshot spider achieves an acceleration rate far faster than a cheetah’s.

  8. Cosmology

    Hidden ancient neutrinos may shape the patterns of galaxies

    The gravitational pull of subatomic particles born in the universe’s first second seem to influence how galaxies cluster into rings.

  9. Chemistry

    Extreme elements push the boundaries of the periodic table

    The hunt for the next elements on the periodic table might turn up superheavy atoms that flaunt the rules of chemistry.

  10. Physics

    Supernovas show the universe expands at the same rate in all directions

    Analyzing supernovas indicates that expansion rates agree within 1 percent across large regions of sky.

  11. Life

    Physics explains how pollen gets its stunning diversity of shapes

    These pollen patterns can all be explained by one simple trick of physics: phase separation.

  12. Quantum Physics

    LIGO will be getting a quantum upgrade

    Quantum squeezing of light will help scientists make better gravitational wave detectors.