Tech Xplore on MSN
Acoustic waves act like tiny hands to move objects thanks to a new chip
Acoustic waves are best known as the invisible delivery agents bringing voices, car horns, or our favorite song to our ears. But the waves can also move physical objects, like an item vibrating atop a ...
Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
From Crushed Sugar Cubes to Exploded Ceramics, This Universal Law Predicts How Most Objects Will Shatter
A new equation calculates how many fragments of each size will be produced when an object breaks. The principle could help ...
The Geminids are one of the best meteor showers of the year—and the weirdest. Here’s how to see them
This December's dazzling display comes from a strange asteroid with comet-like behavior—and a tail of debris that astronomers ...
Obsidian beginners should start with core tools like Daily Notes and Graph View, then add plugins slowly to build a steady ...
June Squibb stars in the Broadway premiere of Jordan Harrison’s meditation on grief and the nature of human and artificial ...
Teased at Google I/O, Project Aura is a collaboration between Xreal and Google. It’s the second Android XR device (the first ...
Detectives often find important clues by digging through rubbish. That approach paid off tremendously for systems biologist ...
To the research team working to save him, KJ Muldoon was first known only as Patient Eta. But within months, KJ’s name — and ...
Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
Inspired by Bird Feathers, This New ‘Ultrablack’ Fabric Absorbs Nearly All the Light That Hits It
Researchers took inspiration from the magnificent riflebird while developing a textile that reflects only about 0.13 percent ...
Live Science on MSN
Glue strong enough to tow a car made from used cooking oil
Chemists used waste cooking oil to create a sustainable, super-sticky adhesive that's strong enough to hold up hundreds of ...
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