Physicists have taken the Universe’s temperature, revealing the searing trillion-degree heat of the Big Bang’s first plasma.
In the blink of an eye after the Big Bang, the universe could have birthed strange new stars and black holes.
Google’s Project Suncatcher and NVIDIA’s Starcloud initiatives mark the opening chapters of orbital AI compute. From solar-powered satellite constellations in low-Earth orbit ...
Mechanical Engineering Professor Alan McGaughey of Carnegie Mellon University recently coordinated the Phonon Olympics, ...
The Franklin Institute announced Nov. 11 that it is awarding the 2026 Benjamin Franklin Medal in Physics, one of the nation’s ...
In 1980, Stephen Hawking gave his first lecture as Lucasian Professor at the University of Cambridge. The lecture was called ...
Learn how Hubble is measuring the expansion rate of the Universe in this new explainer from NASA's Goddard Space Flight ...
Scientists created a form of “super ice” that conducts electricity rather than simply freezing by compressing water under ...
A tiny, particle-sized engine that runs at temperatures approaching the innermost core of the Sun could open a window into ...
If this new model of the universe is right, there were boson stars and cannibal stars hundreds of millions of years before ...