Plasma pinches: From pursuits of nuclear fusion to an attractive point source of accelerated protons for proton radiography.
Iris van Herpen doesn’t design clothes. She is an artist who conducts scientific experiments through the medium of clothing, creating gowns out of solids, liquids, gas, and even living matter. And ...
The heat wave here. Before you lock yourself indoors, make sure you remove these 9 hazards from your car, or else you might ...
The Wright brothers may have achieved the first powered flight, but it was the engineers at NASA in Cleveland that made ...
Welcome to Inside Climate, a new podcast from the staff of Inside Climate News. As the ICN newsroom grows and expands, so is ...
July 8, 2026 Researchers have created an AI-based simulation that makes it much faster to model how neutron star mergers produce many of the universe's heaviest elements. The new tool could improve ...
Every morning, millions of Americans engage in a quiet, collective ritual. We wake up, often pull a smartphone from our ...
Kagurabachi's anime adaptation screens its first 20 minutes tonight at Anime Expo 2026 in Los Angeles, making it the first public anime footage in the series' history — and the specific science ...
Following his historic 2.31m national record, understated Indian high jumper Sarvesh Kushare is quietly defying the ...
Toho cracks open its vault for the first time, teams with 'Train to Busan' writer Yeon Sang-ho and the Oscar-winning VFX crew ...
Iris van Herpen presents 'plasma' dresses in her Sonic Starquakes collection, inspired by exploding supernovae and natural ...
With the explosion of capacity of AI, robotics, machine vision, connected devices, Internet of Things (IoT), 3D printing, and ...