NASA and Japan plan to test a biodegradable satellite made of wood, which burns up more easily than metal on reentry
So far, nine artists—including John Legend, T-Pain, Demi Lovato and Charli XCX—have volunteered their voices
Atop the most powerful rocket ever built, the spacecraft is intended to carry astronauts from lunar orbit to the moon's surface and Mars in the future
In a lab on Earth, the machine created a catalyst from Martian materials that can extract oxygen from water, for astronauts to breathe or use as fuel
Slow-motion video revealed the birds take two different approaches: flying sideways or pinning their wings back and darting like a bullet
The athel tamarisk's hydration trick could improve on human techniques to harvest water in dry environments, researchers say
The patient, who suffered a severe electrical accident in 2021, currently has no vision in the transplanted eye, but doctors say he's recovering well
The discovery, which would have revolutionized energy, was surrounded in controversy from the start
A new online museum explores the digital artifacts that defined the internet's early days
Like humans, the rodents appear to be able to visualize walking through locations they've previously visited
Used by a man between 30 and 50 years old, the four prosthetic fingers date to between 1450 and 1620
Nightshade subtly alters the pixels of an image to mislead A.I. image generators, ultimately damaging the models
FDA advisors said the benefits seem to outweigh any possible risks, and the agency will decide whether to approve it by December 8
The nonprofit behind the tool wants people to learn the history of the spaces they inhabit
Wild Atlantic salmon can struggle with heat as they swim upstream to spawn—but artificial "thermal refuges" may help them cool off
Based on a new aerial survey and modeling study, archaeologists suggest at least 90 percent of sites known as earthworks remain undetected
Moungi Bawendi, Louis Brus and Alexei Ekimov won the award for their work developing tiny “quantum dots” that light TV displays and enable medical imaging
Known as bacteriophages, the specialized viruses could hijack and kill drug-resistant bacteria
Medicine-filled suction cups attached to the inside of the cheek could be an effective alternative to oral tablets or injections, study finds
An FDA panel discussed the new technology—tested only on animals so far—along with its risks and potential to improve survival of preterm infants
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