Not even an asteroid blast could kill it.
This is popcorn science taken way too far. He breaks down exactly why popcorn pops—hard hull, moisture, starch, and pressure—then tests a bunch of grains to see what can puff on its own. After that, ...
New research using Cassini data suggests Titan may not have a global ocean, but small warm water pockets hidden deep in its ...
"Extremophile" bacteria could survive asteroid impacts that are strong enough to launch them into space, suggesting that life could travel between planetary bodies.
Heat shields are designed to protect the surface and cargo of a spacecraft as it enters an atmosphere. Aerospace engineers in The Grainger College of Engineering at the University of Illinois ...
One GM driver just cracked the code on the 5.3L V8’s thirst for lubricant. By bypassing factory fuel-management tech and ...
Oobleck behaves like both a liquid and a solid depending on pressure. In this experiment, a massive 10,000 pounds of the strange substance fills a pool. Trying to swim through it leads to some ...
Creative people don’t all wear paint-splattered clothes or carry notebooks. In fact, some of the most original thinkers rely on routines that look strange or even counterproductive.
As Land Board members, our job is simple: defend Montana ranchers, the school trust, and our way of life. We don’t cater to out-of-state billionaires looking to turn our backyard into their playground ...
A report published by the MEMRI Cyber & Jihad Lab (CJL) highlighted an announcement by a cyber group loyal to Al-Qaeda of ...
Leaders often equate growth with success. But examples from Costco to Glenstone show that knowing when not to scale can create stronger, more durable organizations.
When scientists unwittingly turned helium into a superfluid — a feat many thought was impossible — Dr. Leggett not only recognized what had happened but also explained how.