Satellites have managed to detect faint electromagnetic signals generated by ocean tides, suggesting that space-born sensors ...
A new study suggests the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation has not weakened since the 1960s — but there's no doubt the circulation will slow in the future, experts say.
A study using data from ESA's Swarm mission suggests that faint magnetic signatures created by Earth's tides can help us ...
From OpenAI's new AI model for longevity to a book written in DNA, these were our favorite tech stories from around the web ...
In the opening to Adrian Tchaikovsky's science fiction novel Alien Clay, the latest read for the New Scientist Book Club, our ...
Stuck astronaut takes first spacewalk outside International Space Station The two astronauts launched into space last June on what should have been a weeklong test flight. They have now been stuck ...
Amazon founder Jeff Bezos's space company blasts its first rocket into orbit in a challenge to Elon Musk. The mission was partially successful after the booster that propelled the rocket into ...
Perhaps it’s something hardwired in us that loves the idea of space-age transport. In the 1980s, for example, Isaac Asimov was amused ... who has baulked at the current price of hotel rooms ...
He anchors the show each Friday, bringing radio and Internet listeners worldwide a lively, informative discussion on science, technology, health, space, and the environment. Ira is also founder and ...
A Space Odyssey,” I’d like to suggest that we’re asking the wrong question. Rocko Graziano is a lecturer in data science and machine learning at the University of Maine at Augusta.
Between 700,000 and around one million accounts have been switched every year since 2014, according to data from the Current Account Switch Service (CASS), which helps facilitate the process.
They’re responsible for nearly 20% of drownings at New Zealand surf beaches – yet there’s much about rip currents that scientists are still trying to understand. Jamie Morton explains.