Have you noticed how the world seems unusually quiet after a fresh snowfall? It's not just your imagination, it’s a real phenomenon with a scientific explanation.
A technique called sonification allows new discoveries, brings out subtleties in dense data, and makes astronomy more accessible.
The Substance” and “Queer” distributor Mubi is continuing its acquisition streak, picking up “The History of Sound,” the anticipated gay romance drama starring Paul Mescal and Josh O’Connor, for North ...
The Rise of Spotify and the Costs of the Perfect Playlist, a new book from the journalist Liz Pelly, the playlist is the ...
A tour of the archives beneath Schenectady's Museum of Innovation and Science is a journey through America's history with ...
B oom Supersonic, the company aiming to create commercial planes that can travel faster than the speed of sound, have successfully tested their XB-1 jet. According to the company, the jet was able to ...
Piller, an investigative reporter at Science magazine, presents copious evidence of severe fraud, negligence, and ...
Entanglement—linking distant particles or groups of particles so that one cannot be described without the other—is at the ...
University of Ibadan (UI) Professor Oshiotse Andrew Okwilagwe has founded that it is possible to teach unborn children how to read.
Kaia Gerber and Alyssa Reeder lead the online book club and community Library Science, which aims to "highlight new voices, ...
For decades, people have reported seeing the ghost of a woman searching for her decapitated husband. We finally have a plausible explanation.
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