Grand Canyon Gains New Million-Acre Monument

CLIMATEWIRE | President Joe Biden will create a new national monument in Arizona on Tuesday covering close to a million acres of lands surrounding the Grand Canyon important to nearby Native American tribes. The Baaj Nwaavjo I’tah Kukveni–Ancestral Footprints of the Grand Canyon National Monument will be the fifth designated by Biden in the past 10… Continue reading Grand Canyon Gains New Million-Acre Monument

India Is Pushing Back Against China in South Asia

As the intensifying strategic confrontation between the United States and China dominates many foreign-policy debates, another important competition is quietly playing out. The jostling between India and China for influence in South Asia—from the Himalayas to the islands off the subcontinent in the Indian Ocean—will likely prove crucial to the fate of Washington’s strategy to… Continue reading India Is Pushing Back Against China in South Asia

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Machine Learning Aids Classical Modeling of Quantum Systems

Understanding the quantum universe is not an easy thing. Intuitive notions of space and time break down in the tiny realm of subatomic physics, allowing for behavior that seems, to our macro sensibilities, downright weird. Quantum computers should allow us to harness this strangeness. Such machines could theoretically explore molecular interactions to create new drugs… Continue reading Machine Learning Aids Classical Modeling of Quantum Systems

Is Believing Our Kids Are Safer Worth Closing Off Some of Their Futures?

Fifteen months after the tragedy in Uvalde, many school districts in Texas and around the country are working with their local police departments to place more police officers inside schools. These officers—mostly known as school resource officers—will arrive at a fraught time. Just a few years ago, after George Floyd’s murder, many districts ended their… Continue reading Is Believing Our Kids Are Safer Worth Closing Off Some of Their Futures?

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Reincarnation Theories (Ian Stevenson and Others)

Podcast: Download MYS276: Last time, Jimmy Akin and Dom Bettinelli looked at what parapyschologists have found in studying reincarnation and this time they examine the question of reincarnation. Do we truly live again or is there another explanation? Get all new episodes automatically and for free: Follow by Email | Watch this episode and subscribe… Continue reading Reincarnation Theories (Ian Stevenson and Others)

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How Scientists Are Tackling the Tricky Task of Solar Cycle Prediction

The sun looks immutable, a boring celestial lightbulb that’s always turned on. But this fusion-powered ball of plasma is in constant flux. Every 11 years or so, it swings between slumber and an active, unruly epoch marked by sunspots and solar eruptions, such as flares and plasma outbursts. The sun is now approaching its maximum level of activity in… Continue reading How Scientists Are Tackling the Tricky Task of Solar Cycle Prediction

Normalizing Assad Won’t Solve the Syrian Refugee Crisis

Middle Eastern leaders have been normalizing relations with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and looking ahead to sending Syrian refugees back to their home country, but it is too early to begin repatriating the 5.5 million Syrians who fled the country to escape the fighting there. Turkey announced plans to repatriate a million Syrian refugees in… Continue reading Normalizing Assad Won’t Solve the Syrian Refugee Crisis

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The Fungi Economy, Part 3: Can Climate Modeling from Space Save Our Forests?

Meg Duff: For Science, Quickly, I’m Meg Duff. [CLIP: Show music]  Meg Duff: Last week, if you missed it, I was up in Harvard Forest, learning about a hidden economy: underneath our feet, plants and fungi are constantly trading carbon and nutrients. Duff: Trees use carbon as currency to trade with fungi.  Scientists have figured… Continue reading The Fungi Economy, Part 3: Can Climate Modeling from Space Save Our Forests?

These Technologies Could Defeat China’s Missile Barrage and Defend Taiwan

Earlier this year, a group of experts from RAND and the Special Competitive Studies Project launched a new wargame effort around China’s invasion of Taiwan—but unlike most D.C.-based wargames, this effort heavily involved members of the commercial technology sector, in order to understand what near-term capabilities might be brought to bear on a Taiwan scenario.… Continue reading These Technologies Could Defeat China’s Missile Barrage and Defend Taiwan

The Biggest Smallest Triangle Just Got Smaller

Consider a square with a bunch of points inside. Take three of those points, and you can make a triangle. Four points define four different triangles. Ten points define 120 triangles. The numbers grow quickly from there — 100 points define 161,700 different triangles. Each of those triangles, of course, has a particular area. Hans… Continue reading The Biggest Smallest Triangle Just Got Smaller