Read on to know how gold could help defrost a snowy windshield. Before leaving, you must demist your windscreen since failing to do so might impair your view and cause you to drive unlawfully.
Read on to know how graphene oxide and epidemics helped physicists make a new paint. Through a technique known as "explosive percolation," University of Sussex researchers show how a highly conductive paint layer they have created replicates the network spread of a virus.
Read on to know why male wasps use their prickly, stingy penis to get away with murder. Only female wasps have the tools needed to sting and poison predators.
Read on to know what this exascale computer could do. The Jülich Supercomputing Center (JSC), home to JUPITER, the first exascale supercomputer in Europe, and the European High-Performance Computing Joint Undertaking (EuroHPC JU) have inked a hosting agreement.
Climate change is having a faster-than-expected impact on Churchill, Manitoba in Canada, where bears are returning. Read on to know how it affects these creatures.
Read on to know how physics would help Santa Claus bring Christmas gifts to good people worldwide! Does anyone enjoy the holidays? Santa is hard at work getting ready for his big night, and it would take a genuine Scrooge to refuse society's wonderful tradition with its holiday happiness, gifts, and merrymaking, as well as truly excessive amounts of drunken grandmother farts.
Read on to know why the space hurricane created pink auroras in Norway. A pink aurora was visible over Tromso, Norway, on December 10 night. A magnetic substorm caused this breathtaking aerial spectacle.
Continue to know when Tokyo would implement the mandate on installing solar panels. Beginning in 2025, new residential structures in Tokyo must include solar panels.
Read on to know if your favorite chocolate brand may contain lead and some dangerous metals. Long thought of as healthier than other sweet pleasures, some types of dark chocolate contain potentially deadly levels of heavy metals, scientists said.
Read on to know how missiles and space junk became a threat to satellites and low-Earth Orbit. The amount of rubbish is increasing in low-Earth orbit. This is due to the nearly 18,000 mph speed at which space junk made up of spent rocket boosters, and destroyed satellites and missiles hurtle through space.
Take a look at how the robot survived and healed after being stabbed. Recently, scientists unveiled their development of a robot that resembles Terminator and is capable of self-healing.
Read on to know how nanobots intelligently show its behaviors to humans. The horde of nanobots in best-selling novelist Michael Crichton's "Prey" is slowly becoming a reality.
A woman and kid were allegedly killed in Louisiana by a winter storm system traveling across the south; it is now headed for Florida. Continue reading to find out more about the incident.
Read on to know how the teeth of ancient lemurs uncovered surprising hints about human evolution. Several studies show that the teeth from an extinct monkey species can provide information on the ages of human ancestor fossils.
Read on to know how not to miss Geminid Meteor Shower this month. The Earth experiences numerous meteor showers each year. The Geminid meteor shower, though, is thought to be the most consistent.
Read on to know about NASA Lunar Flashlight's four-month mission and journey to the moon. The Eyes on the Solar System web-based visualization tool from NASA JPL lets you "see" the SmallSat as it travels to the Moon and searches for water ice in the darkest craters there.
When the Orion spacecraft landed in the Pacific Ocean, NASA moved on to the next steps of the Artemis program. Continue reading to learn more about the homecoming.
Take a look at how Cubli could stand on its own without depending on anyone's help. Sometimes engineers have great value and new ideas, and sometimes they are just creative.