You Won't Know if Schrödinger's Cat Is Alive or Dead Until You Use These Mugs
Is the cat alive or dead? You'll only find out when you pour in hot liquid.
Is the cat alive or dead? You'll only find out when you pour in hot liquid.
The ship may have been helmed by soldiers fleeing the historic Siege of Acre.
Researcher Anna O. Szust (“Anna, a fraud” in Polish) was offered an editorial position at 48 publications despite her flimsy credentials—and the fact that she doesn’t exist.
In the pressure cooker that is Grand Slam tennis, men are more likely to choke than women.
Marie Curie famously snagged two Nobel Prizes, but many other women have also been awarded the Physics, Chemistry, and Physiology or Medicine Nobels, too. Here are their stories.
These new minerals have been found in mines, shipwrecks, and even inside museum drawers.
The cheap test could do a world of good in the places that need it the most.
It's a pretty granular-level effect of the axial tilt of an entire planet.
These microscopic monsters just get weirder and weirder.
Opening March 20, "Mummies" lets visitors peer inside remains thousands of years old—all without disturbing or unwrapping them.
What exactly is a climate scientist, and how do they make sense of the complicated systems that rule our lives on the planet?
People living in denser environments have a more future-oriented mindset, one study finds.
Scientists say the drugs routinely administered by beekeepers could be “an underappreciated factor in colony collapse.”
People with depression produced higher-than-average levels of the hormone AVP; the reverse was true for people with schizophrenia.
Shantytowns threaten to swallow Pachacámac, an important pre-Columbian archaeological complex.
Around 90 percent of Polish subjects were willing to administer painful electric shocks to a stranger when instructed by a scientist in the lab.
It's about 400,000 years old.
A new neuroscience study explores what "knowing" and "reckless" look like in the brain.
The autosub is headed to Antarctica to gather data on cold ocean currents.
The origins of syphilis may be one of the greatest (and grossest) health mysteries of our time. What we do know is that, throughout history, people were quick to point fingers at each other.
Learn what a "connectome" is, regardless of your age or level of education.
It could save the U.S. $77 billion (or more) in healthcare costs and reduce each person’s greenhouse gas emissions by nearly 500 pounds per year.
The artifact is believed to date back to the 2nd century CE.
After taking two weeks to complete, the work was destroyed.