Mike Marcum didn’t have a lab, funding, or a PhD. Just a pile of salvaged electronics — and a theory. One night in Missouri, he fired up his homemade device. It formed a vortex. He tossed in a screw.
Time travel has long lived in the realm of fantasy, but a growing body of research is quietly shifting it into a serious ...
China has broken its own record in hypergravity research after completing construction of its multi-tonne centrifuge that can ...
CHIEF1900 will help to recreate catastrophic events such as dam failures and earthquakes inside a lab, university says.
You have probably seen the images of the surface of Mars, beamed back by NASA's rovers. What if there were a time machine capable of roaming Earth ...
Expect the unexpected, the saying goes, and that was certainly true in 2025. President Donald Trump was a major source of global and domestic disruption, but the year’s instability was also driven by ...
Researchers develop a new XPS technique enabling surface studies at atmospheric pressure, enhancing real-world chemical ...
Scientists achieve major robotics milestone as robot learns 1,000 different physical tasks in single day, potentially ...
Cambridge Consultants was among the first tenants to rent space at the Cambridge Science Park in 1979. The company's ...
Which exercise machine burns the most calories? The one you enjoy and will use the most. Here are our all-time favorite cardio machines we have tested at Live Science. When you purchase through links ...
One farmer's harrowing story exposes the tech takeover of America’s heartland, and the fight to reclaim the keys.
Biology has always been an unruly science. Cells divide when they want to. Genes switch on and off like temperamental lights.