SCIENCE

How the body copes with airway closure

There is perhaps no bodily function more essential for humans and other mammals than breathing. With each breath, we suffuse

SCIENCE

Healable cathode could unlock potential of solid-state lithium-sulfur batteries

Researchers have moved one step closer to making solid-state batteries from lithium and sulfur a practical reality. A team led

SCIENCE

Study takes wider view at household size, children’s development

Researchers from The University of Texas at Dallas’ School of Behavioral and Brain Sciences (BBS) are taking a more detailed

SCIENCE

Interstellar signal linked to aliens was actually just a truck

Sound waves thought to be from a 2014 meteor fireball north of Papua New Guinea were almost certainly vibrations from

SCIENCE

Bee-2-Bee influencing: Bees master complex tasks through social interaction

In a groundbreaking discovery, bumblebees have been shown to possess a previously unseen level of cognitive sophistication. A new study,

SCIENCE

Nanodevices can produce energy from evaporating tap or seawater

Evaporation is a natural process so ubiquitous that most of us take it for granted. In fact, roughly half of

SCIENCE

Baby quasars: Growing supermassive black holes

The James Webb Space Telescope makes one of the most unexpected findings within its first year of service: A high

SCIENCE

Children surpass a year of HIV remission after treatment pause

Four children have remained free of detectable HIV for more than one year after their antiretroviral therapy (ART) was paused

SCIENCE

Sinking land increases risk for thousands of coastal residents by 2050

One in 50 people living in two dozen coastal cities in the United States could experience significant flooding by 2050,

SCIENCE

Do some electric fish sense the world through comrades’ auras?

It would be a game-changer if all members of a basketball team could see out of each other’s eyes in