How NASA’s Mission to Pluto Was Nearly Lost

On the Saturday afternoon of July 4, 2015, NASA’s New Horizons Pluto mission leader Alan Stern was in his office near the project… | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 6 years ago

The Popular Creation Story of Astronomy Is Wrong

In the early years of the 17th century, Johannes Kepler argued that the universe contained thousands of mighty bodies, bodies so huge… | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 6 years ago

5 Things That Sound, Move, or Smell Like a Nuclear Explosion

The Licorne (“Unicorn”) thermonuclear test; Fangataufa, French Polynesia; 1970Photograph courtesy of Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban… | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 6 years ago

How Social Media Exploits Our Moral Emotions

The architecture of social media exploits our sense of right and wrong, reaping profit from the pleasure we feel in expressing righteous… | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 6 years ago

Mumbling Is a Clever Data-Compression Trick

Far from being a symptom of linguistic indifference or moral decay, mumbling displays an underlying logic similar to the data-compression… | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 6 years ago

How Posture Makes Us Human

The very notion of what in the ancient world defines the human being in contrast to all other living things is simple: upright posture.… | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 6 years ago

Dear iPhone–It Was Just Physical, and Now It’s Over

I can’t count the number of times I pulled out my phone just for the feeling of unlocking the screen and swiping through applications,… | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 6 years ago

Explaining the Unexplainable

During the Enlightenment, the French philosopher Voltaire called superstition a “mad daughter” and likened it to astrology. The… | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 6 years ago

The Deep Time of Walden Pond

A careful reading of Walden; or, Life in the Woods makes it clear that Thoreau never intended his cabin to be a solitary hermitage,… | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 6 years ago

What Earth Tells Us About Life, Intelligence and the Universe (2013)

 An artist’s conception of Earth alongside Kepler-69c, Kepler-62e, and Kepler-62f, three of the most Earth-like, potentially… | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 6 years ago

What We’ll Do in Space by 2118

In a mere 60 years, we of Earth have gone from launching our first spacecraft, to exploring every planet and major moon in our solar… | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 6 years ago

Why Science Needs Metaphysics

Technology cannot keep pace with theoretical predictions about subatomic reality coming from physics. The same applies to our ability… | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 6 years ago

How You Can Be a Less Politically Polarizing Person

Partisanship doesn’t just affect moral and perceptual judgments—even cold, quantitative reasoning can’t escape its pull. A 2013… | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 6 years ago

Dolphins Are Helping Us Hunt for Aliens

SETI Institute astronomer Laurance Doyle proposed using information theory to analyze animal communication systems, particularly the… | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 6 years ago

Can You Die from a Broken Heart? (2014)

Ruth and Harold “Doc” Knapke met in elementary school. They exchanged letters during the war, when Doc was stationed in Germany.… | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 6 years ago

Super-Intelligent Humans Are Coming (2014)

Lev Landau, a Nobelist and one of the fathers of a great school of Soviet physics, had a logarithmic scale for ranking theorists,… | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 6 years ago

Why Happiness Is Hard to Find–in the Brain

I arrived for my meeting with Professor Chambers at the pleasant Cardiff pub near his office where we’d agreed to have lunch. He… | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 6 years ago

How Long Until a Robot Cries (2013)

When Angelica Lim bakes macaroons, she has her own kitchen helper, Naoki. Her assistant is only good at the repetitive tasks, like… | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 6 years ago

Can You Overdose on Happiness?

It is a good question, but I was a little surprised to see it as the title of a research paper in a medical journal: “How Happy… | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 6 years ago

Can You Overdose on Happiness?

It is a good question, but I was a little surprised to see it as the title of a research paper in a medical journal: “How Happy… | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 6 years ago

Mining in Space Could Lead to Conflicts on Earth

Platinum-group metals in space may serve the same role as oil has on Earth, threatening to extend geopolitical struggles into astropolitical… | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 6 years ago

Your DNA Is Nothing Special (2015)

Who’s your daddy? It’s a fair question. A meta-study published in 2006 by a University of Oklahoma anthropology professor estimated… | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 6 years ago

Artificial Intelligence Is Already Weirdly Inhuman (2015)

Nineteen stories up in a Brooklyn office tower, the view from Manuela Veloso’s office—azure skies, New York Harbor, the Statue… | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 6 years ago

The book no one read

I remember well the first time my certainty of a bright future evaporated, when my confidence in the panacea of technological progress… | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 6 years ago

Moore’s Law Is About to Get Weird (2015)

I’ve never seen the computer you’re reading this story on, but I can tell you a lot about it. It runs on electricity. It uses… | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 6 years ago

The Day the Mesozoic Died (2016)

“Understanding how we decipher a great historical event written in the book of rocksmay be as interesting as the event itself.”—Walter… | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 6 years ago

You're a Bad Judge of How Good Looking You Are

Why are we such bad judges of how others see us? Epley’s answer is that other people are novices about us, while we’re experts.“The… | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 6 years ago

Civilization Is Built on Code

Code is at once a force, or a means, of liberation and constraint.Photograph by Donnie Ray Jones / FlickrHow did we humans manage… | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 6 years ago

The Argument Against Terraforming Mars

When it comes to the ethics of actions, such as the decision to terraform Mars, we should ask: What sort of person would do that—a… | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 6 years ago

How My Nobel Dream Bit the Dust

“You may speculate from the day that days were created, but you may not speculate on what was before that.”—Talmud, Tractate… | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 6 years ago

Using molecular codes, plants cry for help and save each other (2013)

Entomologist Richard Karban knows how to get sagebrush talking. To start the conversation, he poses as a grasshopper or a chewing… | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 6 years ago

How mirror neurons affect the experience of fandom

You won’t have seen it on the podium, but the human brain’s mirror neuron system could have medaled at this year’s Olympic Games,… | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 6 years ago