
Science & Society
Analyze This: Do bad childhoods make movie villains?
In DC and Marvel movies, a rough childhood doesn’t always mean that characters become villains.
Come explore with us!
In DC and Marvel movies, a rough childhood doesn’t always mean that characters become villains.
The drug varenicline, paired with counseling and text messaging support, helped young people stop vaping in a new study.
No protons, neutrons or electrons. And yet, based on what scientists know about fundamental particles, this variety of atom just might exist.
The variant gene is found on the X chromosome. This sex-linked trait for orange fur is found only in domesticated cats.
Cells lining the blood vessels reorganize their inner structures to handle stressful boosts in pressure.
Astronomers now agree there’s a lone black hole wandering around the Milky Way — the first solitary black hole ever detected.
These rough draft models help engineers test how a concept translates from theory to reality.
In tests, the electricity that water droplets made was small, but kept a dozen LEDs lit. This tech might one day power clean energy for wet or rainy places.
Snapdragon blooms can distinguish between the sounds of pollinators and thieves. They boost or drop the sugar in their nectar depending who’s arriving.
Fingertip folds aren’t super swollen. Blood vessels constrict and pull skin inward, forming wrinkles.