A tiny algae recently discovered in India is helping to reconstruct how the oceans moved millions of years ago.
The Brighterside of News on MSN
Scientists can now 3D print one of the world’s hardest tool materials
Hard materials keep modern life moving, from drill bits to cutting tools. One of the toughest is tungsten carbide with cobalt ...
After the Red Planet reemerged from conjunction — a period when NASA doesn't communicate with spacecraft because Mars is behind the sun from Earth's point of view in space — scientists began planning ...
Mercedes enters the 2026 season with new regulations, a new engine formula (historically their sweet spot) and a new driver ...
A doctoral student re-created a tiny piece of the universe in a bottle to investigate the chemistry that led to life on Earth.
Some are embracing the new technology largely uncritically, regarding it as a tool that can speed up teaching processes, ...
For two weeks, medical experts monitor the astronauts as they remain indoors, live in isolation, and avoid physical touch, all to prevent harmful microbes from traveling to space.
Upregulated expression of transcription factors promoting cone identity in late-stage retinal progenitors drives development ...
The famed collider at Brookhaven National Laboratory has ended operations, but if all goes to plan, a new collider will rise ...
Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
If microbes entered the Olympics, these one-celled superstars would win gold
In winter sports, lugers slide at more than 90 miles per hour, hockey players send the puck zipping across the ice at 100 mph ...
The federal public defender's office in L.A. was 5 and 0 against prosecutors in trials related to immigration raids and protests. Trial No. 6 was last month.
Farmers in Louisiana are going toe-to-toe with some nasty enemies: apple snails that clog crawfish traps while laying ...
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