Extreme elements push the boundaries of the periodic table0
- From Around the Web, Science & Technology
- September 10, 2019
For superheavy atoms, chemistry gets weird

For superheavy atoms, chemistry gets weird

Just in time for the 50th anniversary of the moon launch, a group of local computer restoration experts has succeeded in getting a half-century-old Apollo Guidance Computer into working order. They even used it to “land on the moon.”

Pulsars are incredible heavenly bodies.

Researchers have successfully created a model of the Universe using artificial intelligence, reports a new study.

Unique experiments at Berkeley Lab’s Advanced Light Source shine a light on a new pathway for carbon chemistry to evolve in space

If planting more trees can replenish forests and remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, then could we also repopulate the Arctic with ice?

A team of students from Ohio has created a new drug that has the potential to treat one of the deadliest forms of brain cancer. The breakthrough is expected to end the need for surgeries that are known to have side effects and death risk.

Built-in night vision may not be far off. Scientists have developed nanoparticles that allow mice to see near-infrared light.

Reports say the Hong Kong police have ordered 500 of the suits.

NASA engineers have installed the miniature helicopter on the space agency’s Mars 2020 rover. The Mars Helicopter, nicknamed Scout, will be the first aircraft to fly on another planet.



