Can Trees Heal Heart Disease?

Researchers in this polluted city are planting thousands of trees in a bold health experiment aimed at lowering rates of cardiovascular disease. | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 1 year ago

Cancer Cells Most Active During Sleep, Study Finds

For metastatic breast cancer, scientists discover that circulating tumor cells activate the most while patients sleep. But experts advise not to sleep less. | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 1 year ago

Bottling Sunshine (2009)

Renewable power is inspiring clever new ways to store electricity—and to uncork it exactly when and where it is needed. | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 1 year ago

The Rise, Fall and Underestimated Rule of Kush

This Sudanese kingdom thrived for more than 2,000 years in Africa, even ruling over Egypt for a century. But its identity has long been eclipsed by Egyptian history. | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 1 year ago

Is the Future Already Written? (2015)

A conscientious cosmologist rejects Einstein’s notion that time is an illusion and the future is set | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 1 year ago

California's Rampaging Oak Fire as Seen from Space

Dramatic satellite imagery reveals the scope of the blaze — now as large as Manhattan Island and burning out of control. | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 1 year ago

First Image of Micrometeoroid Damage to the James Webb Space Telescope

The damage to NASA's flagship observatory was significantly greater than pre-launch expectations | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 1 year ago

How Do Dolphins Choose Their Name?

Dolphins identify themselves with a unique whistle that scientists have likened to a human name. Here's how they decide what to call themselves. | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 1 year ago

Children of a Lesser God: Einstein's Descendants

For the offspring of a science deity, the legacy is more burden than blessing. | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

Mysterious Gut Taste Buds Might Inform Your Diet

Specialized cells in our gut can tell the brain whether you’re eating sugar or artificial sweeteners. The emerging research could help us understand the dynamic gut-brain connection. | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

The Selective Laziness of Reasoning

The Selective Laziness of Reasoning | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

Remarkable story of maths genius who had almost no brain (2006)

"Is Your Brain Really Necessary?", Revisited | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

Scientists Discover Specific Neurons Involved in Making Memories

In a new study, intracranial electrodes helped reveal the cells in our brains and the neurological mechanisms responsible for memory creation. | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

Biobots

Can man mimic organic life-forms with machinery? Take a look . . . | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

Complexity on a simian's face reveals a great deal about its society. (2013)

The complexity, or lack thereof, on a simian's face reveals a great deal about its society. | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

Can We Move Beyond Food?

Some powders and drinks boast all of the necessary nutrients a body needs — no grocery trips required. But it isn't clear how drinking our meals might affect our health. | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

Israeli Military Veterans Built a Sniper Drone

Israeli Military Veterans Built a Sniper Drone | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

Average Body Temperature Takes a Dip

For the last century and a half, body temperature has been dropping. Lower metabolic rates, thanks to improved public health, may be behind the decrease. | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

Eye Color

Scientists are still learning new things about our most striking feature. | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

Magnetic Zaps to the Brain Can Alter People’s Moral Judgments (2010)

Magnetic Zaps to the Brain Can Alter People’s Moral Judgments | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

Hyperloop pushes commercial operations into 2030

Early tests show that hyperloop technology can work quickly and safely. Is it coming to a city near you anytime soon? Here's everything you need to know about the super speed train. | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

Brains Might Sync as People Interact – That Could Upend Consciousness Research

When we cooperate on certain tasks, our brainwaves might synchronize. This finding could upend the current understanding of consciousness. | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

Earth Is Spinning Faster Now Than It Was 50 Years Ago

Compensating for the lost time may prove challenging for scientists. | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

Mathematicians Cracked the Zodiac Killer’s Cipher

After 50+ years, a trio of codebreakers solves the puzzle and earns a nod from the FBI. | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

Why Are Chimpanzees and Gorillas Suddenly Going to War?

An interspecies primate war may be unfolding before our eyes. | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

The Rise of Climate Anxiety

Climate change is a systemic issue, so it can be difficult for any one person to address the impact it has on their mental health. Experts weigh in on ways you can process climate anxiety. | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

Why Carl Sagan Was Denied Membership in the National Academy of Sciences

No one knew better than Carl Sagan how vital it is for scientists to communicate with the public. And no one knew better what grief they get when they do. | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

We Discovered the Number Zero

Zero as a concept was something that didn’t always exist in human cultures. We had to find it for ourselves — more than once. | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

Why Lo-Fi Music Draws Listeners In

The fuzz and crackle over Lo-Fi music's familiar beats evokes emotions some of us are looking for right now. | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

How to Survive the End of the Universe (In 7 Steps) (2014)

The cold, dark end is coming. We need an escape plan. | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

Can Science Explain Near Death Experiences?

An estimated 9 million people in the U.S. alone have had a transformative near-death experience. Scientists are grappling with what’s happening inside their heads. | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

Pigeons Outperform Humans at the Monty Hall Dilemma

Pigeons outperform humans at the Monty Hall Dilemma | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

Your Brain Is Not a Computer. It Is a Transducer

A new theory of how the brain works — neural transduction theory — might upend everything we know about consciousness and the universe itself. | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

Long Live Closed-Source Software

There's a reason the iPhone doesn't come with Linux. | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

The First Atomic Bomb Created This ‘Forbidden’ Quasicrystal

Scientists once thought their structures impossible. Now, the discovery of the oldest man-made quasicrystal could expand the world of nuclear forensics. | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

How Do SpaceX's Starlink Satellites Work? – Discover Magazine

Take a closer look at Elon Musk’s orbiting constellation of satellites, which are built to deliver high-speed, low-latency internet across the globe. | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

The 50th Anniversary of Starfish Prime: The Nuke That Shook the World

The 50th Anniversary of Starfish Prime: The Nuke that Shook the World | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

Remembering the Crew of Soyuz 11, the Only Astronauts to Die in Space

The ill-fated replacement crew of Soyuz 11 spent three weeks performing experiments on the world's first space station. But their return trip ended in tragedy. | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

Africa Became Black (1994)

Africa's racial history was not necessarily its racial destiny. To unravel the story of Africa's past, you must not only look at its faces but listen to its languages and harvest its crops. | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

The “Eleven Dimensional” Brain? Topology of Neural Networks

The "Eleven Dimensional" Brain? Topology of Neural Networks | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

The Search for the Oldest Alcohol (2018)

If recent reports are true, it would mean the earliest known beer production was 13,000 years ago. | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

Battery Innovations That Will Energize Our Future – Discover Magazine

These next-gen solutions will provide safer, more stable and longer-lasting power for everything from the energy grids to the phones in our pockets. | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

Our Brains Build Models of the World While We Sleep, Daydream and Hallucinate

Our brains are master generators of things that only exist inside our heads. Neuroscientists studying unique mental states say these processes tell us a lot about how our minds work. | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

Worried About Swearing Too Much? Science Says You Shouldn't Be

People who swear like a sailor are more honest and more intelligent, studies show. | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

Apollo-Soyuz Mission: When the Space Race Ended

The space race formally ended on July 17, 1975, when the U.S. and Soviet Union linked up in orbit and shook hands during the Apollo-Soyuz mission. | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

The Source of the Nile River: A Mystery That Spanned Three Millennia

A seemingly simple question of geography captivated explorers and rulers throughout history — and lives on to this day. | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 2 years ago

Apollo 11'S “1202 Alarm” Explained

What exactly was the 1202 program alarm that could have killed Apollo 11’s landing? | Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 3 years ago

How to Help Save Pollinators with Citizen Science

Continue reading


@discovermagazine.com | 3 years ago