How Did a Landslide Shake the Earth for Nine Days?

No evidence to support any of these ideas was forthcoming. People started jokingly wondering if it was aliens or dragons having a rave or a tantrum. Some sort of leviathan “always comes up” when abnormalities like this baffle seismologists, Hicks said. Three days after the great collapse, the Danish navy surveyed the fjord to chronicle… Continue reading How Did a Landslide Shake the Earth for Nine Days?

China-U.S. Science Collaborations Are Declining, Slowing Key Research

China-U.S. Science Collaborations Are Declining, Slowing Key Research The U.S. and China are collaborating less on projects across scientific disciplines amid a culture of fear in both countries By Gemma Conroy & Nature magazine Manuel Augusto Moreno/Getty Images China’s scientific collaboration with other countries has declined since the pandemic, driven by falling partnerships with the… Continue reading China-U.S. Science Collaborations Are Declining, Slowing Key Research

Major Breakthrough Puts Element 120—the Heaviest Ever—within Reach

New Superheavy Element Synthesis Points to Long-Sought ‘Island of Stability’ A novel way of making superheavy elements could soon add a new row to the periodic table, allowing scientists to explore uncharted atomic realms By Max Springer Jacklyn Gates, head of the Heavy Element Group at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in California, is leading an… Continue reading Major Breakthrough Puts Element 120—the Heaviest Ever—within Reach

Perplexing the Web, One Probability Puzzle at a Time

In late January, Daniel Litt posed an innocent probability puzzle on the social media platform X (formerly known as Twitter) — and set a corner of the Twitterverse on fire. Imagine, he wrote, that you have an urn filled with 100 balls, some red and some green. You can’t see inside; all you know is… Continue reading Perplexing the Web, One Probability Puzzle at a Time

Biden Enacted Landmark Heat Protections. Millions of Public Employees Are Still in Danger

CLIMATEWIRE | President Joe Biden heralded the nation’s first-ever proposal to protect workers from heat as a lifesaving measure at a time when searing temperatures are killing more Americans than any other disaster. But the draft rule announced this month is haunted by a 50-year-old loophole that would stop it from defending about 7.9 million… Continue reading Biden Enacted Landmark Heat Protections. Millions of Public Employees Are Still in Danger

First ‘Cocaine Sharks’ Discovered off Brazil

Sharks in Brazil Test Positive for a Surprising Contaminant: Cocaine Cocaine has been detected in sharks for the first time, but scientists aren’t sure of the impact By Stephanie Pappas Researchers found cocaine in sharpnose sharks off Brazil. These sharks are in the same genus as the Atlantic sharpnose shark, shown here with a student… Continue reading First ‘Cocaine Sharks’ Discovered off Brazil

Chatbots Aren’t Sentient, but You Should Be Nice to Them Anyway

If you’ve ever caught yourself saying “please” and “thank you” to ChatGPT, you’re in good company. In an informal online survey by Ethan Mollick, an associate professor at the University of Pennsylvania, nearly half of the respondents said they are often polite to the artificially intelligent chatbot, and only about 16 percent said they “just… Continue reading Chatbots Aren’t Sentient, but You Should Be Nice to Them Anyway

How the Higgs Field (Actually) Gives Mass to Elementary Particles

The discovery of the Higgs boson at the Large Hadron Collider in 2012 confirmed what we particle physicists had long suspected: that there is a field permeating the cosmos that generates the masses of elementary particles. Unfortunately, physicists have found it challenging to explain to everyone else how this so-called Higgs field accomplishes its mighty… Continue reading How the Higgs Field (Actually) Gives Mass to Elementary Particles

The Legacy of Lynchings Still Hurts the Economic Prospects of Black Americans

The Legacy of Lynchings Still Hurts the Economic Prospects of Black Americans Despite progress, the long shadow of racial violence continues to undermine economic opportunities for African Americans today By Sotiris Kampanelis A historic marker detailing lynching in Anne Arundel County and in America at Whitmore Park on Calvert Street is seen September 17, 2019… Continue reading The Legacy of Lynchings Still Hurts the Economic Prospects of Black Americans