The CosmicWatch device costs only $100 to make, making it accessible for both high school students and spacecraft operators.
You can't see, feel, hear, taste or smell them, but tiny particles from space are constantly raining down on us.
If scientists are able to inspect it in person, and they find that Mars was indeed once alive with microbes, we would know ...
Paris summit warns about “mirror life.” Scientists call for early limits on mirror bacteria that could evade defenses and ...
David Lindstrom, professor of social science, will become the dean of Brown’s Graduate School on Jan. 1, 2026, Provost Francis Doyle announced in a Monday Today@Brown announcement. He will succeed ...
Claudio Neves Valente, the suspect in the shooting that killed two students and left an additional nine injured, recorded ...
Spencer Axani, assistant professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy, is the inventor of CosmicWatch, a portable, ...
Unchained Labs, the life sciences company that's all about getting biologics and gene therapy researchers the right tool for ...
Bigger than Hubble and launching as soon as 2029, the Lazuli Space Observatory would be the first-ever full-scale private ...
For roughly a century, organic chemistry students have been taught to treat Bredt’s rule like a hard stop sign. If a double bond sits at the bridgehead of a small, rigid bicyclic molecule, the ...
As Americans celebrate the nation's 250th birthday, underwater archaeologists race against time to save Lake Champlain's ...
TikTok is overflowing with videos promising to “flush” uric acid, reverse gout overnight, or cure joint pain with a single ...