The Brighterside of News on MSN
A glass bead and a green laser helps scientists observe lightning form in real time
A single green laser, a glass bead smaller than a bacterium and a lab in Austria are helping you see lightning in a new way.
Morning Overview on MSN
NASA’s Roman will deliver the biggest asteroseismic haul yet
The Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope is being built to map the universe on a scale no previous observatory has attempted, ...
Over the past decades, physicists and quantum engineers introduced a wide range of systems that perform desired functions ...
For years, longevity was the domain of billionaires and biohackers. Now, the UAE is turning it into a real-estate movement, ...
Physicists using near-absolute-zero detectors have reached unprecedented sensitivity in the hunt for light dark matter. A ...
Whether you need a simple drill/driver kit or a huge collection of power tools, The Home Depot has Ryobi options on sale for ...
Two research projects from Utrecht University’s Faculty of Science have received an ENW-M grant from the Dutch Research Council (NWO). These grants support curiosity-driven and high-risk ideas. The ...
Surveillance body linked to the EU gives green light for scheme for development of small-scale floating projects to make ...
Members of the Corby community have taken part in a citizen science effort to investigate possible metal pollution in the ...
The $330m Jiangmen Underground Neutrino Observatory (JUNO) has released its first results following the completion of the huge underground facility in August. JUNO is located in Kaiping City, ...
Six AI leaders are uniting to form a single company. How is this possibly legal, asks Madhavi Singh of Yale’s Thurman Arnold Project, an initiative dedicated to antitrust issues.
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