Here’s why scientists are questioning whether ‘sonic attacks’ are real0
- From Around the Web, Science & Technology
- June 6, 2018
Using a sound wave to cause neurological damage would be hard to do

Using a sound wave to cause neurological damage would be hard to do

You map, IMAP, we all map.

Three nearly identical genes could help explain how 0.5 liters of gray matter in early human ancestors became the 1.4-liter organ that has made our species so successful and distinctive.

Artificial Intelligence is used to inverse design nanoparticles to emit particular spectra of colors.

The MiniBooNE experiment found more interactions of the subatomic particles than expected

Crocodiles share a common ancestor with dinosaurs, so could they hold the key to bringing these extinct reptiles back?

Dive deep into the well of knowledge.

A new type of camera developed by U.S. researchers will allow astronomers to directly image planets around nearby stars in the search for another Earth.

How will we survive on Mars once we get there?

Kilauea volcano is spewing lava and belching hazardous gases on Hawaii’s Big Island, forcing more than 1,700 people to evacuate their homes. Eruptions aren’t anything new on Kilauea. In particular, the Pu’u ‘Ō’ō vent, where lava is exposed, has erupted almost continuously since January 1983. But the latest eruption took volcanologists by surprise when it