Articles for category: Material Science, New Discoveries, Physics

The Frog That Freezes Solid and Survives - What We Learned

The Frog That Freezes Solid and Survives – What We Learned

Gargi Chakravorty

You might think surviving winter means finding shelter, migrating south, or hibernating through the coldest months. That’s what most animals do. Then there’s the wood frog, which takes the most radical approach to winter survival imaginable. It lets itself freeze solid as ice until spring returns. Honestly, when you first hear about it, the whole ...

How Space Dust Might Be Falling on You Right Now

How Space Dust Might Be Falling on You Right Now

Jan Otte

Every moment of every day, tiny fragments from the deepest reaches of the cosmos are silently drifting down through Earth’s atmosphere and settling on surfaces all around you. These microscopic travelers have journeyed billions of miles across the solar system, some carrying materials older than our planet itself. Right now, as you read this, space ...

The Deepest Hole on Earth - Why Scientists Stopped Drilling

The Deepest Hole on Earth – Why Scientists Stopped Drilling

Gargi Chakravorty

Picture this: you’re exploring the most mysterious frontier on Earth, not by launching into space, but by digging straight down through the very ground beneath your feet. While NASA was racing to reach the moon in the 1960s, Soviet scientists embarked on an equally ambitious journey in the opposite direction. Their destination wasn’t the stars ...

Could Evolution Ever Reverse Itself? Scientists Debate the Possibility

Could Evolution Ever Reverse Itself? Scientists Debate the Possibility

Gargi Chakravorty

Evolution has always been portrayed as a forward march toward greater complexity and specialization. Yet beneath this familiar narrative lies one of biology’s most intriguing questions: can the evolutionary process actually turn around and head backward? Picture a snake suddenly sprouting legs again, or a bird redeveloping teeth after millions of years without them. While ...

Could a Tsunami Ever Hit the Great Lakes? Experts Weigh In

Could a Tsunami Ever Hit the Great Lakes? Experts Weigh In

Andrew Alpin

Picture this: you’re enjoying a perfect summer day at a Great Lakes beach when suddenly, the water starts behaving strangely. The waves grow larger than they should during calm weather, and within minutes, a wall of water crashes onto the shore with devastating force. This isn’t science fiction or a disaster movie plot. Scientists have ...

The Strange Case of People Who Hear the Sky Hum

The Strange Case of People Who Hear the Sky Hum

Jan Otte

You might be one of those people who’s been lying in bed at night, wondering if you’re losing your mind. That strange, persistent hum coming from somewhere you can’t quite pinpoint. The neighbors don’t seem bothered by it. Your family says they don’t hear anything. Yet there it is, night after night, that low-frequency drone ...

Why Some Lakes Turn Pink Every Summer

Why Some Lakes Turn Pink Every Summer

Gargi Chakravorty

Picture this: you’re standing at the edge of what looks like a massive strawberry milkshake stretching to the horizon. A pink lake is a lake that has a red or pink colour. “I didn’t believe that it could be that pink, but it’s like a Pepto Bismol pink,” one visitor describes. This isn’t some chemical ...

Warp speed.

The Physics of Star Trek: How Much of Sci-Fi Is Becoming Real?

Trizzy Orozco

In the vast realm of science fiction, “Star Trek” stands as a beacon of imaginative storytelling, blending futuristic technology with dazzling space adventures. Yet, beneath its fictional veneer lies a fascinating question: how much of this sci-fi universe is becoming real? As technology rapidly advances, what once seemed like pure fantasy is slowly inching closer ...

Why Some Bats Glow Under Ultraviolet Light

Why Some Bats Glow Under Ultraviolet Light

Andrew Alpin

You might think Halloween decorations when you hear about glowing bats, yet scientists have recently discovered something truly remarkable. When placed ing, six species of the critters were found to emit a green luminescence, marking a groundbreaking discovery in North American wildlife research. It is the first record of the phenomenon in bats native to ...