Around 13.7 billion years ago, something collapsed. It fell outward into the nothingness that stretched in every direction, ...
Families gathered at Williamsburg Independent School Tuesday night for “Jackets Go to the Moon,” a sensational Science Family STEAM Night featuring hands-on activities, space-themed experiences, and ...
Three and a half kilometers beneath the Mediterranean Sea, around 80km off the coast of Sicily, lies half of a very unusual ...
No Weapon X yet, but Captain America: Brave New World marks the arrival of adamantium to Earth-616 in a departure from its ...
Earlier this month Vodeb and his colleagues published the findings of their cosmic bubble simulation in Nature Physics. Using ...
China’s space strategy is shaped by military ambitions, aspirations for technological dominance, and ubiquitous commercial ...
Plans call for the proposed $1.2 billion development east of Grand Park Sports Campus to include a full-dome planetarium, hotel, retail, offices and multifamily housing.
Stone-Age cannibalism, elephant seals act as deep sea sentinels, rabbits eat their own teeth, and our ears used to be gills.
By observing tiny ripples in spacetime called "gravitational waves" that propagate away from colliding black holes, scientists could reveal hidden asymmetries in the universe.
Asteroids that orbit close to the Earth inevitably cause us some anxiety due to the even remote possibility of a collision.
"An epic exploration of possibilities. What If is a Webby Award-winning science web series that takes you on a journey through hypothetical worlds and possibilities, some in distant corners of the ...