News

Iranian Shahed drones, Ukrainian quadcopters and the U.S.’s Golden Horde program reveal three paths to massed autonomy, and ...
Deadly temperatures put great stress not just on human life but also on the economy, infrastructure, agriculture and health ...
Critics fear that U.S. Department of Health and Human Services chief RFK, Jr., known for his antivaccine views, has picked a ...
To drive the development of such AI, we must develop a new test—let’s call it the Gardner test—in which an AI is surprised ...
Using a notion called integer partitions, mathematicians have discovered a new way to detect prime numbers while also ...
Researchers have measured the brain’s faint glow for the first time, hinting at a potential role of “biophotons” in cognition ...
I study social media for a living. Here’s what parents need to know so that kids can use it safely and productively ...
Scientific American is part of Springer Nature, which owns or has commercial relations with thousands of scientific publications (many of them can be found at www.springernature.com/us). Scientific ...
When Israeli aircraft recently struck a uranium-enrichment complex in the nation, Iran could have been days away from achieving “breakout,” the ability to quickly turn “yellowcake” uranium into ...
The game-changing Vera C. Rubin Observatory will collect more astronomical data in its first year than all other telescopes ...
A man with a severe speech disability is able to speak expressively and sing using a brain implant that translates his neural ...
Physicists are a step closer to using quantum computers for simulations that are beyond the ability of any ordinary computers ...