Physics
Sign up for our newsletter
We summarize the week's scientific breakthroughs every Thursday.
- 			
			
		AstronomyWhere does the solar wind come from? The eclipse may offer answers
A quick-fire polarization camera should help scientists detect the origins of the solar wind during the Aug. 21 eclipse.
 - 			
			
		AstronomyWhy are the loops in the sun’s atmosphere so neat and tidy?
Observations during the total solar eclipse may explain why the sun’s atmosphere is so organized despite arising from a tangled magnetic field.
 - 			
			
		 - 			
			
		AstronomyWhat can the eclipse tell us about the corona’s magnetic field?
The corona’s plasma jumps and dances thanks to the magnetic field, but scientists have never measured the field directly.
 - 			
			
		AstronomyCan the eclipse tell us if Einstein was right about general relativity?
During the eclipse, astronomers will reproduce the 1919 experiment that confirmed Einstein’s general theory of relativity.
 - 			
			
		Particle PhysicsNormally aloof particles of light seen ricocheting off each other
Scientists spot evidence of photons interacting at the Large Hadron Collider.
 - 			
			
		AstronomyWhy is this year’s solar eclipse such a big deal for scientists?
Total eclipses offer scientists a way to see all the way down to the sun’s surface.
 - 			
			
		Materials Science50 years ago, steel got stronger and stretchier
Today, scientists are still trying to improve steel.
 - 			
			
		Planetary ScienceMoon had a magnetic field for at least a billion years longer than thought
The moon’s magnetic field could have lasted until about a billion years ago.
 - 			
			
		AnimalsReaders fascinated by critters’ strange biology
Readers responded to fish lips, monkey brains, sunless tanner and more.
 - 			
			
		Particle PhysicsNeutrino experiment may hint at why matter rules the universe
T2K experiment hints at an explanation for what happened to antimatter.
 - 			
			
		Particle PhysicsNeutrinos seen scattering off an atom’s nucleus for the first time
New type of interaction confirms that neutrinos play by the rules.