WASHINGTON (Reuters) - When NASA sent its DART spacecraft to slam into the asteroid Dimorphos in 2022, the U.S. space agency demonstrated that it was possible to change a celestial object's trajectory ...
The first high-energy collisions between light nuclei at the Large Hadron Collider confirm the unusual 'bowling-pin' shape of neon nuclei and offer up a new tool to study the extreme state of matter ...
This summer, the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) took a breath of fresh air. Normally filled with beams of protons, the 27-km ring was reconfigured to enable its first oxygen–oxygen and neon–neon ...
When NASA sent its DART spacecraft to slam into the asteroid Dimorphos in 2022, the U.S. space agency demonstrated that it was possible to change a celestial object's trajectory, if needed, to protect ...
Steph Panecasio was an Editor based in Sydney, Australia. She knows a lot about the intersection of death, technology and culture. She's a fantasy geek who covers science, digital trends, video games, ...
An image depicting a uranium nucleus emitting particles as it collides with an electron. Courtesy of Chunjian Zhang/Fudan University and Jiangyong Jia/Stony Brook University Scientists have developed ...