All Science
- Can slow-motion video bias jury trials?
A new study shows how slow-motion video tends to bias juries: They're more likely to say the crime was calculated rather than impulsive.
- Scientists develop new form of light
Scientists have developed a way to bind photons to individual electrons, allowing for a new type of light that has properties of both elementary particles.
- How government officials mistakenly sold artifacts from Apollo 11
The bag used by Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin to collect the first samples of lunar rock was accidentally sold at a government auction last year.
- Spectacular comet suicide: Does that happen often?
Daredevil Kreutz comets fly close to the sun, leading to hundreds of solar suicides.
- Oops. We didn't actually find a new particle, say disappointed physicists
Data suggesting scientists were on the verge of discovering a new particle was actually just a blip, researchers announced Friday.
- Myth meets science: Did researchers just verify a Chinese legend?
The tale of China's first dynasty seems fantastical, but scientists now say there may be a kernel of truth to it.
- First LookHow to deal with toxic waste buried in Greenland's rapidly melting ice caps
A new study shows that a US military base in Greenland, expected to be encased by ice and snow forever, is now dangerously close to being exposed.
- First LookAstronomical anniversary: Curiosity rover celebrates four years on Mars
What have we learned from Curiosity's mission on the Red Planet so far?
- First LookHow do sunflowers follow the sun's path? A circadian clock revealed
Scientists says sunflowers are much more complex than they appear. A new study shows how the bright flower manages its own circadian clock.
- Asleep at the wing? How frigatebirds can nap while flying
For the first time, researchers observed birds sleeping while in flight.
- Fossils hold hidden clues to the evolution of whales' incredible hearing
Scientists find that a 27-million-year-old whale's ear likely could pick up remarkably high-frequency sounds.
- First LookA quantum leap for computing: lasers add dexterity and speed
The first re-programmable quantum computer is powered by five ytterbium atoms, and researchers say it is capable of running any algorithm.
- How do bees work together to cool their hives?
For the Asian giant honeybee, keeping cool is a group effort.
- Scientists take a closer look at Io's collapsible atmosphere
The volcanic moon's atmosphere temporarily freezes and collapses as it passes through Jupiter’s shadow, a finding that ends a long-running debate.
- A surprise in our galaxy: a vast tract of space with no young stars
Researchers say theories on galaxy formation may need to be revised after the discovery of a star desert near the center of the Milky Way.
- First LookWhy do the homes of the affluent have more bugs?
Rich in arthropods – a new study reveals that homes of plenty are also home to plenty of insects and bugs.
- Some grieve as China says goodbye to its Jade Rabbit moon mission
The space probe lasted two years longer than the most recent lunar rover, a Soviet mission that went dark in May 1973.
- Next stop, the Moon: private company 'Moon Express' gets greenlight for 2017
The Florida-based company is the first to get government permission to fly beyond Earth’s orbit.
- First LookState of the climate: Not good, 2015 decimated temperature records
A new report from 450 scientists looks past broken temperature records to examine a host of indicators and effects of climate change and El Niño that were visible in 2015 – the hottest year on record.
- First LookLook up: a remarkable Perseid meteor shower is coming
Astronomers are predicting that the number of visible Perseid meteors could double in the Earth's August 12 brush with comet dust.