Researchers at the University of Oxford have pioneered a new approach to simulate turbulent systems, based on probabilities.
Questions attribution studies seek to answer are: did the warmer climate make a flood, heatwave, fire or storm more likely, ...
Immerse your students in the innovative world of animal-free research and discover The Future of Science! This film is one of ...
Centerstone’s Institute engaged in 13 research projects, completed evaluations for more than 58 grants, and interviewed over ...
University students sought to inspire curiosity in biomedical engineering through a hands-on learning experience at George ...
A thousand feet beneath the desert, the United States conducts experiments to verify that its weapons work. But some fear a ...
Like Trump, Kennedy for years has wielded a firehose of falsehoods across multiple fronts and has engaged in assorted ...
Astronomers have found some pretty wild exoplanets. Some are balls of lava the temperature of hell, one is partially made of ...
A team of interdisciplinary professors received a $25,000 research seed grant to promote renewable energy options in low ...
A new study in Nature Communications explores the dynamics of higher-order novelties, identifying fascinating patterns in how ...
An algorithm inspired by quantum computers but used on classical machines can make weather forecasts and other turbulence ...
The U.S. hasn't tested a nuclear weapon in decades, and since the 1990s has used simulations and experiments to verify they're working properly. NPR was granted a rare look at how they do it.