News

As environmental challenges grow, underwater habitats gain momentum with DEEP's Vanguard, supporting short missions and ...
At Caltech, researchers have turned living jellyfish into low-cost, remotely controlled ocean robots — creating real-life ...
There has been a wide array of great sci-fi movies that were simply overlooked and underappreciated by critics, such as Logan ...
Adventure movie fans who found themselves hooked to the action of Jurassic World Rebirth are in for a surprise.
A China-led international deep-sea cooperative exploration project has won United Nations approval, paving the way for Beijing’s increased participation in global science and technology ...
Early visions of Mars: Meet the 19th-century astronomer who used science fiction to imagine the red planet by Matthew Shindell, The Conversation edited by Lisa Lock, reviewed by Andrew Zinin ...
‘Amazing Worlds of Science Fiction and Science Fact’ Review: An Education in Exoplanets Researchers were surprised to find giant gas planets orbiting quite near to their stars.
In his stories, Han Song explores the disorientation accompanying China’s modernization, sometimes writing of unthinkable things that later came true.
Science fiction, in its most charitable and optimistic interpretations, can render concepts that most may not even dream of, creating entirely new avenues for thinking about the potential and limits ...
In an interview, Annalee Newitz, the inaugural “creator-in-residence” of a new Yale series called “Sci X Sci-Fi,” explains how science fiction can help point the way to a thriving tomorrow.
Science fiction, with its new technologies and new societies, has a clear appeal for many of us, especially those with an interest in the study of science.
In 1917, a civil engineer pioneered the first deep-sea vehicle to attempt filming underwater. A century later, we have James Cameron and AI.