Physics
Crush explores how gravity shapes life as we know it
James Riordan’s new book will help readers wrap their heads around this mysterious, fundamental force of nature.
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James Riordan’s new book will help readers wrap their heads around this mysterious, fundamental force of nature.
We summarize the week's scientific breakthroughs every Thursday.
“Magic-angle” graphene may provide new clues into poorly understood unconventional superconductors, which operate at higher-than-normal temperatures.
Simple chemistry could give the reindeer his famously bright snout. But physics would make it look different colors from the ground.
President Trump has argued the U.S. should test nuclear weapons because other countries are doing it. But scientific data suggest they’re not.
Ammolite gems’ fabulous colors arise from delicate assemblies of crystal plates.
Streams of liquid form drops thanks to unidentified disturbances. It could be the jiggling of individual molecules.
Math and physics explain the anguish of a golf ball that zings around the rim of the hole instead of falling in.
Theoretical physicist Alex Lupsasca is pushing for a space telescope to glimpse the thin ring of light that is thought to surround every black hole.
With a high-speed camera and a tiny guillotine, scientists showed that chopping onions slowly and with sharper knives cuts down on tears.
Google says its quantum computer achieved a verifiable calculation that classic computers cannot. The work could point to future applications.
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