News

The tools that feminist science studies have developed are critical to the sciences because they ask new questions, and ...
President Donald Trump’s speech at the graduation of the class of 2025 from the U.S. Military Academy at West Point included ...
The central event of the third day of the school was a lecture by Maxim Patrushev, head of the Kurchatov Genomic Center at ...
Computer history is not only a history of machines but also of politics, culture, language—and human work. Julia Ravanis' ...
In the context of global green transformation, nuclear power is reemerging as a national strategic priority. According to ...
The “National Science Foundation FY 2026 Budget Request to Congress” calls the LIGO system “the most sensitive detector of ...
Editor in Chief Nancy Shute discusses the centennial of quantum mechanics’ framework, Hubble’s 35th anniversary and the legacy of Kanzi the bonobo.
It can tell us about vegetation, climate and even human activity through time. Pollen grains are far more than allergens — ...
Among the rocks and marine fossils, scientists have found fossilized pollen from the Late Cretaceous and Early Paleocene periods that reflects changes in the surrounding ecosystems. The pollen reveals ...
Cora E. MacBeth, a chemist with 20 years of experience as a faculty member, researcher and academic administrator at Emory University, has been appointed director of the School of Science at Penn ...
Science is for all of us and by all of us—it is humanity’s never-ending story, and it should be honored and protected.
Ohio State professors like me have watched in horror as the symbol of American scientific might has been thrown to, well, the DOGE.