A recent study presents a new way to understand life by describing it as a cascade of machines producing machines, spanning ...
H. G. Wells is a titan in the world of science fiction, and there's one now-classic sci-fi film that the author absolutely ...
This morning on The Rhode Show, we were delighted to welcome back Jolting Jonathan and Atomic Allen from Mad Science of Southern MA and RI as they shared a fun experiment with Brendan Kirby.
This dreamy journey across California will lead you to 12 hidden ice cream shops serving up delightful frozen treats! Nestled in the heart of San Francisco, Humphry Slocombe is the Willy Wonka of ice ...
viewed as an extension of the scientist's brain. Kevin Yager, Electronic Nanomaterials Group leader at the Center for Functional Nanomaterials (CFN), detailed the idea in Digital Discovery.
This discovery could impact research on gene-linked diseases. Scientists from Delft, Vienna, and Lausanne have uncovered that the protein machines responsible for shaping our DNA can reverse their ...
Prominent blockchain researcher Chen Jing has left the United States to join Tsinghua University in Beijing as a full-time professor. The award-winning scholar and chief scientist said she would ...
Ever wondered how fast your brain actually works? Well, scientists have just cracked the code. In an interesting new study, researchers discovered how quickly our brains process information.
Scientists have taken a look at the effect dying has on the human brain and what they found is pretty insane. The idea that your brain just stops working when you die couldn't be further from the ...
Sign up for CNN’s Wonder Theory science newsletter. Explore the universe with news on fascinating discoveries, scientific advancements and more. If you are using ...
We’ve already seen the brutal world of Mad Max realized in an open-world game, but what if those themes of survival and vehicular combat could emerge in a different form? Say, a top-down ...
New research published in Science Signaling employs model systems ... causing it to misfold and accumulate in the brain. Using the fruit fly Drosophila, researchers developed a model that mimics ...