NGC 7331, the sight of supernova SN2025rbs, imaged by George Gheirchi (US).
Stars aren't supposed to simply disappear, yet countless bright objects that once appeared in the sky in the 1950s no longer do. To try to solve the mystery, scientists have turned to a growing field ...
Imagining a future where we can monitor the health of the planet's forests and crops with millimeter precision is no longer science fiction. This is the objective of INTERSEN, a project included in ...
The European Space Agency’s Citizen Science Earth Observation Lab (CSEOL, pronounced “sizzle”) is accepting ideas for citizen science projects based on Earth observations until 5 May, as Uta Wehn of ...
What judges look for when selecting the projects which earn awards in the North Carolina Science and Engineering fair each year. Students across North Carolina are pasting hypotheses and conclusions ...
Recent advances in cometary science have yielded unprecedented insights into the composition, dynamics and evolution of cometary nuclei and their surrounding comae. Studies now demonstrate that comets ...
For many, the term “scientist” brings up images of people clad in white lab coats clutching glass tubes, gathering data that will appear in dense academic articles that most people can’t parse, let ...
Misty Stoll scans the area for movement as she waits for a deer to pass her blind on Oct. 20 in rural Clay County.
If your kids are home for the summer, either entirely or in amounts you didn't previously anticipate, they might be looking for something to do. Or you may be looking for something for them to do.
Growing up, we all had to do all kinds of science projects in school. For Baby Boomers, here are several classic science projects that just about everyone had to do at least once.