The Boston area lost several luminaries in 2025, but their contributions won’t soon be forgotten. From Kitty Dukakis’s ...
Are we medicating or "special educating" young geniuses out of becoming future Einsteins when their late talking is ...
For the scientific enterprise, 2025 was marked by setbacks and challenges. But scientists are no strangers to adversity—the ability to overcome obstacles is built into our training. In turn, research ...
She worked on preparations for the second, third, and fourth shuttle missions, and was a Cape Crusader at the Kennedy Space ...
ZME Science on MSN
The internet chronicles – part 7 of 12: The tree the internet grows on
Previously, we watched Tim Berners-Lee knit the world together with the Web, giving us pages to browse and links to click.
If you’ve been on the lookout for some truly inspiring reads for the young girls (and boys) in your life, you’ve come to ...
Let’s start with the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory’s National Ignition Facility (NIF)—arguably the largest, most ...
From a particle smasher encircling the moon to an “impossible” laser, five scientists reveal the experiments they would run ...
Valve says that Steam Frame won’t be able to display traditional (‘flat’) games in stereoscopic 3D at launch, but they are ...
This correspondence between brain state and brain responsiveness (statedependent responses) is outlined at different scales from the cellular and circuit level, to the mesoscale and macroscale level.
Every school had a certified genius. They were the valedictorian, the kid who ruined the grading curve, the person whose future seemed like a straight, golden road paved with scholarships and success.
Quantum 2.0: The Weird Physics Driving a New Revolution in Technology by Paul Davies (Feb. 6, $26, ISBN 978-0-226-84932-4) ...
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