If everyone went 100 percent geothermal today, Earth’s store of thermal energy would still outlive the sun.
Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: Two Physicists Bet Over a Quantum Computing Moon Shot
Topological quantum computing has long been a beautiful dream. Two top scientists are now facing off over whether it will exist by 2030.
Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: A Computer Science Proof Holds Answers for Math and Physics
An advance in our understanding of quantum computing offers stunning solutions to problems that have long puzzled mathematicians and physicists.
Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: Measure the Speed of the ISS With Your iPhone
Using just the technology in your pocket, you can gauge the velocity of the space station as it zips across the night sky.
Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: How to Spot Fake Video Stunts—With Science\!
This amazing soccer trick has gone viral. But does it hold up to the laws of physics?
Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: Science Has a New Way to Gauge the Universe’s Expansion Rate
Cosmologists want to know how fast the universe is growing, but their data doesn’t match predictions. Wendy Freedman thinks red giant stars can help.
Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: Katherine Johnson’s Math Will Steer NASA Back to the Moon
She mapped Apollo 11’s path to history. Now, her legacy lives on in the trajectories of future spaceflights—including the moon landing planned for 2024.
Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: A Star’s Auroras Light the Way to a New Exoplanet
For the first time using this new technique, astronomers have identified an Earth-size planet by observing telltale solar flares.
Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: Wait, Is That Backpack … Floating?
A new pack from HoverGlide looks like magic. But there’s a perfectly good physics explanation.
Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: Physicists Take Their Closest Look Yet at an Antimatter Atom
Scientists at CERN found a way to trap hydrogen’s mirror twin, antihydrogen, long enough to study it in greater detail than ever before.