Astronomy
How to spot the lunar X and V
Time it right each month, and you can spot two fleeting tricks of light on the lunar surface. Abigail Beall is planning ahead
Categories: Astronomy
How to spot the lunar X and V
Time it right each month, and you can spot two fleeting tricks of light on the lunar surface. Abigail Beall is planning ahead
Categories: Astronomy
Let's nitpick about the physics of Stranger Things, not its ending
Feedback has seen all the fuss about the finale of Stranger Things, but would like to point out that if we're going to dissect the plot, we have bigger things to worry about
Categories: Astronomy
Let's nitpick about the physics of Stranger Things, not its ending
Feedback has seen all the fuss about the finale of Stranger Things, but would like to point out that if we're going to dissect the plot, we have bigger things to worry about
Categories: Astronomy
Peter F. Hamilton's latest is an epic slice of sci-fi – with one flaw
Peter F. Hamilton’s new book A Hole in the Sky is set on a troubled ark ship hundreds of years into its voyage, with fantastic plot twists and turns. I'm a big Hamilton fan, but one aspect of the novel proved alienating for me, says Emily H. Wilson
Categories: Astronomy
Peter F. Hamilton's latest is an epic slice of sci-fi – with one flaw
Peter F. Hamilton’s new book A Hole in the Sky is set on a troubled ark ship hundreds of years into its voyage, with fantastic plot twists and turns. I'm a big Hamilton fan, but one aspect of the novel proved alienating for me, says Emily H. Wilson
Categories: Astronomy
New Scientist recommends Avatar: Fire and Ash – especially the whale
The books, TV, games and more that New Scientist staff have enjoyed this week
Categories: Astronomy
Can we battle the downsides of a rule-based world, asks a new book
Imposing order on the world is seductive, but it flattens out the diversity and rich messiness of human life. Oddly, playing by the rules may help us fight back, argues C. Thi Nguyen in The Score
Categories: Astronomy
New Scientist recommends Avatar: Fire and Ash – especially the whale
The books, TV, games and more that New Scientist staff have enjoyed this week
Categories: Astronomy
Can we battle the downsides of a rule-based world, asks a new book
Imposing order on the world is seductive, but it flattens out the diversity and rich messiness of human life. Oddly, playing by the rules may help us fight back, argues C. Thi Nguyen in The Score
Categories: Astronomy
The internet feels super lonely right now. Here's why
Almost 80 years ago, sociologists identified a new personality type that is particularly sensitive to loneliness. It's even more relevant today, says Annalee Newitz
Categories: Astronomy
The internet feels super lonely right now. Here's why
Almost 80 years ago, sociologists identified a new personality type that is particularly sensitive to loneliness. It's even more relevant today, says Annalee Newitz
Categories: Astronomy
We were wrong about being able to 'nudge' people to improve the world
We thought we could address big social problems by steering individual behaviour. But "nudging" people doesn't work, say behavioural scientists Nick Chater and George Loewenstein
Categories: Astronomy
We were wrong about being able to 'nudge' people to improve the world
We thought we could address big social problems by steering individual behaviour. But "nudging" people doesn't work, say behavioural scientists Nick Chater and George Loewenstein
Categories: Astronomy
New JWST images show Helix Nebula in astonishing clarity
A fresh look at the Helix Nebula captures new details of the cycle of stellar life and death
Categories: Astronomy
NASA’s Artemis II Rocket and Spacecraft Make Their Way to Launch Pad
NASA's massive Crawler-Transporter, upgraded for the Artemis program, carried the agency's SLS (Space Launch System) and Orion spacecraft on the Mobile Launcher from the Vehicle Assembly Building to Launch Pad 39B at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida in preparation for the Artemis II mission.
Radio Telescopes on the Moon Could Let Us Observe Dozens of Black Hole Shadows
The resolution of the Event Horizon Telescope is limited by the diameter of Earth, and our observations of the black hole in M87 and in our own galaxy are at the edge of that limit. To observe other, more distant black holes we will need radio telescopes on the Moon.
Categories: Astronomy
Oldest cave art ever found discovered in Indonesia
Beating the previous record for the oldest known cave artwork by at least 15,000 years, a hand stencil in an Indonesian cave might shed light on when early humans migrated to Australia
Categories: Astronomy
Our earliest vertebrate ancestors may have had four eyes
Extraordinary fossils of 518-million-year-old jawless fish, among the earliest known vertebrates, appear to show that these animals had two pairs of eyes
Categories: Astronomy
Our earliest vertebrate ancestors may have had four eyes
Extraordinary fossils of 518-million-year-old jawless fish, among the earliest known vertebrates, appear to show that these animals had two pairs of eyes
Categories: Astronomy
