SCIENCE

The physicist searching for quantum gravity in gravitational rainbows

[ad_1] THE fans roar into life, pumping air upwards at 260 kilometres per hour. Decked out in a baggy blue jumpsuit, red helmet and plastic

SCIENCE

Flavour-predicting AI can tell brewers how to make beer taste better

[ad_1] Beer brewers generate a huge variety of flavours from just a handful of ingredients Kutredrig/Getty Images An artificial intelligence that can predict how a

SCIENCE

Ancient people carved mysterious symbols near dinosaur footprints

[ad_1] Dinosaur footprints and rock carvings, both highlighted with dashed lines, at the Serrote do Letreiro site in Brazil Leonardo Troiano/ National Institute of Historic

SCIENCE

Paper planes made by a robot fly better than ones made by humans

[ad_1] A robot that can design, build and test objects made from folded paper can make paper planes that fly further than ones made by

SCIENCE

Your nationality may influence how much you talk with your hands

[ad_1] A police officer in Rome, Italy, gesturing to a tourist Jochen Tack/imageBROKER/Alamy People of different nationalities appear to vary in their use of hand

SCIENCE

Huge crater in India hints at major meteorite impact 4000 years ago

[ad_1] The Luna structure, a 1.8-kilometre-wide depression in north-west India, may have been caused by the largest meteorite to strike Earth in the past 50,000

SCIENCE

3 Body Problem review: Cixin Liu’s masterpiece arrives on Netflix

[ad_1] VR allows characters to visit fantastical worlds, such as a fiery wasteland Netflix 3 Body ProblemDavid Benioff, D. B. Weiss and Alexander WooNetflix ADAPTATION

SCIENCE

Why we need to invoke philosophy to judge bizarre concepts in science

[ad_1] Theories of mind and cosmos are inevitably preposterous – knowing how to weigh competing implausibilities can help us decide which we should back [ad_2]

SCIENCE

Try these mathematical magic tricks that are guaranteed to work

[ad_1] LOOK, I’ve got nothing up my sleeves. There are magic tricks that work by sleight of hand, relying on the skill of the performer

SCIENCE

Dust clouds from the Sahara are reaching Europe more frequently

[ad_1] Dust being carried by the wind from the Saharan desert over the Canary Islands and Cabo Verde in January 2024 European Union, Copernicus Sentinel-3