Gabriel Gomes built an agent that turns plain English into physical experiments, enabling research that humans alone could never sustain ...
Materials science isn't the most glamorous science out there, but it has the potential to manifest the most change, and win a ...
Applied physicists in the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) have discovered a new way ...
In the 1930s, the Switzer brothers stumbled onto a way to mimic fluorescence. That led to Day-Glo, which has been making the world a brighter place ever since ...
Out in the Kuiper Belt, the massive doughnut of debris beyond Neptune, about one in 10 kilometer-scale objects have surprised scientists with their unexpected shape. Rather than resembling a ball, ...
Move over, Hailey Bieber — there’s a new status symbol hitting the shelves at Erewhon — and this one claims to have the data ...
The technology industry is obsessed with the future. Many of our modern marvels are rooted in the legacy of Bell Labs, an ...
Using concepts students are already familiar with — like how bottles vibrate — can serve as a helpful anchor for more complex topics.
A new bio-inspired molecule captures solar energy and releases it as heat on demand, outperforming lithium-ion batteries.
PulpFixin ® , a materials science company focused on replacing single-use plastics in life science laboratories, will debut a slate of new automation-ready, compostable lab products at the 2026 SLAS ...
Archeologists found evidence that ancient Romans may have used a medical treatment involving perfume... and human feces.
Researchers found a tiny bottle from ancient Rome that contained fecal residue and traces of aromatics, offering evidence that poop was used medicinally more than 2,000 years ago.