Scientists have created the first material where light can travel infinitely fast.
After news of extraterrestrials, the public is primed for more sightings. In this case, though, it's a Buddha statue on Mars-sort of.
Scientists may have discovered a long-sought-after "glueball" particle, created entirely of gluons. These "sticky" particles actually keep nuclear particles together.
New face recognition software could be a way to prevent fraud.
Scientists have found that the famous backyard photo of Lee Harvey Oswald showing him holding the same type of rifle used to assassinate President John F. Kennedy was not faked.
It turns out that a mere 2 degrees Celsius of warming may lock in global sea level rise for thousands of years.
Scientists may have learned a bit more about the dates for cataclysm on early moon and the Earth. It turns out that the current dating method that researchers have used may be incorrect.
A warmer future with normal rainfall on California's coast may leave coastal redwoods with a significantly different climate.
A massive coronal hole in our sun has been captured by NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory. Now, this hole is causing some auroral displays on Earth.
MIT may soon be replacing human intuition with algorithms. Scientists have created a new big-data analysis system that outperforms 615 of 906 human teams.
Scientists are learning a bit more about hot Jupiters, thanks to some new observations.
Scientists have created crystals that capture carbon dioxide much more efficiently than previously known materials, even in the presence of water.