Signatures of hydrogen in spectrograms hint at places in the universe where new physics might lurk.
The unusually large Muon has threatened the Standard Model for decades, but new data parks the particle inside the cozy confines of established physics.
The experiment paves the way to potentially making an entirely new one: element 120, also known as the "island of stability."
Images from inside a fusion reactor show how one of nature's most extreme processes is replicated on Earth.
A big change in air pressure likely ruined cups of tea across Britain, scientists say.
Tachyons are a hypothetical particle generally thought to be incongruous with Einstein's theory.
The latest Quantinuum computer has nearly double the number of qubits as its predecessor and outperforms its competitors 100-fold.
The labyrinthine fractal is based on movements in chess and strange crystal structures found in the physical world.
The device, which traps thousands of atoms to keep time, is "pushing the boundaries of what's possible with timekeeping."
The long-anticipated experiment will have a revised schedule and a different approach to reaching its eventual reactions.
ITER, the largest testing bed for nuclear fusion on Earth, could prove the viability of the power source—if it ever turns on.
The unique geometric shape maintains a constant width regardless of the dimension it's measured in.
Join me down the rabbit hole of energy storage's future.
The technology has implications for some of the most carbon-intensive processes on the planet.
A severe geomagnetic storm triggered auroras around much of the globe this past weekend, but conspiracy theorists are falsely pointing to a human cause.
As it turns out, if you ignore physics, your submersible won't be very good.
A fusion device ensconced in highly durable tungsten sustained a more energetic, denser plasma than previously recorded.
The findings affirm a 90-year-old theory about how electrons can assemble without atoms.
The stellarator has permanent magnets, a first for a fusion experiment.
The 3.2-billion-pixel LSST Camera will collect 15 terabytes of data on the southern sky each night.
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