With water, dish soap, sugar, and optional sparkles, you can make your own bubbles. The science siblings demonstrated it.
A study shows that electrical charges in sprays of water can cause chemical reactions that form organic molecules from inorganic materials. The findings provide evidence that microlightning may have ...
Technological advances that lead to fairer, more accurate calls are often seen as triumphs. But new technology doesn’t mean ...
Stanford researchers have combined machine learning with high-resolution satellite and airplane observations to understand ...
Broad Institute scientist Alina Chan sparked controversy by suggesting COVID originated in a Chinese lab. Five years later, ...
Getting seven experiments on the International Space Station requires a really good idea. Like a brand new way to attack tumors—one that you can only make in space.
MSK is proud to announce that four Sloan Kettering Institute (SKI) researchers have been named 2025 Marie-Josée Kravis Women ...
An Oak Ridge nonprofit said it received dozens of applications from across East Tennessee for a chance to improve technology ...
An ambitious start-up embodies new optimism that artificial intelligence can turbocharge scientific discovery.
The film details the process of soap making, starting with Carl Mason's laboratory demonstration using fat and sodium hydroxide (lye). It explains the chemical reaction known as saponification, where ...
Nearly 200 students from around Santa Cruz County brought their unique science experiments and works of art to the ...
New numbers from the White Coat Waste Project, shared with The Washington Times, show that the National Institutes of Health ...