Last August, 65,000 litres of bright red chemicals were pumped into the Gulf of Maine - yet this wasn't an enormous industrial disaster.
To some it was a reckless experiment but scientists hope the dispersal of 65,000 litres of sodium hydroxide into the Gulf of Maine could ease the climate crisis ...
Scientists at the University of Cambridge have developed a new way to alter complex drug molecules using light rather than toxic chemicals—a discovery that could accelerate and improve how medicines ...
65,000 liters of bright red tracer-tagged chemical entering the ocean sounds less like climate research than a cleanup ...
To unlock materials of the future, including better photocatalysts or light-switchable superconductors, researchers need to ...
Imagine waiting in line for a shot when someone who just got one tells you it was really painful. Could hearing that make the shot hurt more? According to a new Dartmouth study, what others say about ...
Artificial intelligence-powered writing tools such as autocomplete suggestions can definitely change the way people express themselves, but can they ...
Pushed down to a certain scale, the laws of physics seem to fall apart. Astrid Eichhorn, a leader in an area of study called asymptotic safety, thinks we just need to push a little further.
Blue light, a sheet of filter paper, and a stubborn class of industrial chemicals do not sound like much of a match. Yet that ...
Eleven shows are coming to Austin next season from Broadway in Austin and Texas Performing Arts ...
We can extract CO2 from the ocean. Can it turn into a business?
New findings on how the human heart adapts to expressive music features, like loudness or tempo, could lay the foundations for targeted music-based "exercises" to support heart health. Led by King's ...