Astronomy
Astrophotographer captures galactic fireworks near the Seahorse Nebula in eerie deep-space photo
Best binoculars by price — Find the perfect pair for your budget
Simple device can produce water, oxygen and fuel from lunar soil
Simple device can produce water, oxygen and fuel from lunar soil
The anthropologist who says shamanism works, even if you don’t believe
The anthropologist who says shamanism works, even if you don’t believe
New Parkinson’s Implant Listens to Brain Waves to Treat Symptoms
New deep-brain-stimulation implants for Parkinson’s disease can listen in on brain waves and adapt to treat symptoms. Can this approach target other conditions?
JWST finds unusual black hole in the center of the Infinity Galaxy: 'How can we make sense of this?'
Aurora Australis
Astronomers See Planet Formation ‘Time Zero’ in an Alien Solar System
Observations of a baby star may show the earliest stages of planet formation that astronomers have ever seen
Astronomers witness the birth of a planetary system for the 1st time (video)
The Large Hadron Collider Discovers Antimatter Behaving Oddly in New Class of Particles
The LHCb experiment has observed a new difference between matter and antimatter in particles called baryons
NASA's sci-fi-looking X-59 feels the supersonic wind blow in test tunnel | Space photo of the day for July 16, 2025
Our Milky Way galaxy may be surrounded by 100 undetected 'orphan' galaxies
The Link between Weather and Migraines Explained by a Neurologist
A neurologist explains why weather changes from heat waves to thunderstorms might bring on painful headaches
If aliens existed on Mars 3.7 billion years ago, they would have needed umbrellas
China's Mars Mission Could Answer the Ultimate Question: Are We Alone?
China is poised to make space exploration history again with its Tianwen-3 mission launching in 2028. With the audacious plan to drill two meters beneath Mars' radiation blasted surface it aims to collect samples that could harbor ancient microbial life, and bring them back to Earth for the first time in human history! The mission's most intriguing challenge isn't the technical feat of interplanetary sample return, it’s the quarantine protocols required once these potentially life containing samples arrive on Earth making this mission as much about protecting our planet as it is about exploring another.
A Few Bright Buildings Light Up the Entire Night Sky
A 14year study of Hong Kong's Earth Hour participation has revealed that it's not the millions of apartment windows or office buildings that steal our night sky, but rather a small handful of brightly lit skyscrapers and LED advertising boards that have an outsized impact on darkness above cities. When these decorative lights and digital screens go dark, the night sky becomes up to 50% darker, offering a hopeful new strategy for tackling light pollution without requiring massive citywide changes. Could this be he the change that dramatically improve night sky visibility for stargazers, wildlife, and anyone hoping to reconnect with the the night sky above our urban landscapes?
Magnets Could Become the Next Generation of Gravitational Wave Detectors
When Einstein's predicted ripples in spacetime pass through magnetic fields, they cause the current carrying wires to dance at the gravitational wave frequency, creating potentially detectable electrical signals. Researchers have discovered that the same powerful magnets used to hunt for dark matter could double as gravitational wave detectors. This means experiments already searching for the universe's most elusive particles could simultaneously capture collisions between black holes and neutron stars, getting two of physics' most ambitious experiments for the price of one, while potentially opening entirely new windows into the universe's most violent events.