A burst of light from far away may have been an odd type of exploding star or a white dwarf being eaten by a black hole.
Posts published in “Science & Technology”
Desalination plants help offset the world’s growing water needs, but they also produce much more supersalty water than scientists realized.
Examining personal electronics may help gauge people’s radiation exposure in the event of a nuclear accident or attack.
According to the new market research report “Hyper-Converged Infrastructure Market by Component (Hardware and Software), Application (Remote office/branch office, Virtualization Desktop Infrastructure, and Data center…
The partial government shutdown is taking many U.S. scientists out of commission and putting up hurdles to their research.
An autonomous drill originally designed for work on Mars has its first mission in Antarctica.
Blobs of worms flow like a fluid, plop like a solid and fascinate scientists.
In some forms of autism, nerve cells develop faster than normal, possibly setting the stage for the disorder, a study finds.
Novel use of poisoned toilet paper rolls and teabags led to discovery that termites help tropical forests resist droughts.
Seabirds idly drifting with ocean currents provide a novel way to track and understand how these flows change with time and location.