March 21, 2018 World's craziest water slides These crazy water slides will send you free-falling into swimming pools, spinning in circles, and hitting speeds as high as 65 miles per hour.
March 20, 2018 11 bizarre sources for alternative energy Here are 11 of the more unusual sources that go above and beyond the norm. Who knows. One day, you may use sugar to power your laptop, bacteria to run your car or dead bodies to heat a building.
March 14, 2018 Stephen Hawking unlocked a 'universe of possibilities,' NASA says Tributes are pouring in for famed physicist Stephen Hawking, who died early on Wednesday. He was 76 years of age.
March 14, 2018 Quotations from Stephen Hawking Physicist and author Stephen Hawking possessed an uncanny ability to come up with memorable phrases and sayings that summed up his world view.
March 14, 2018 Stephen Hawking: Tech execs remember legacy of famed physicist Tech executives, ranging from Apple CEO Tim Cook to Google CEO Sundar Pichai weighed in on Stephen Hawking's passing, remembering his contributions to science and humanity.
February 9, 2018 The author of this physics paper is 7 years old (and also a cat) On April 1, 2014, the American Physical Society announced a landmark change in policy: All scientific papers authored by cats would henceforth become freely available to the public.
January 30, 2018 Tractor beam levitates large orbs with sound A new "tractor beam" can levitate large objects in midair, using only sound.
December 28, 2017 Physicists are trying to create the perfect snowflake Nothing in nature is perfect — but frosty, shimmery snowflakes come pretty close.
October 16, 2017 'Beam of invisibility' could hide objects using light Once thought of as the province of only "Star Trek" or "Harry Potter," cloaking technologies could become a reality with a specially designed material that can mask itself from other forms of light when it is hit with a "beam of invisibility," according to a new study.
October 5, 2017 Nobel Prize for Physics: Einstein would be 'flabbergasted' by gravitational wave win Albert Einstein would be pleased — but flabbergasted — to hear the details of humanity's first direct detection of gravitational waves, according to one of three scientists who just won the Nobel Prize for the discovery.