News

Science does not just happen in labs or academic journals. It shapes our health, our economy, our security and our way of ...
To celebrate Scientific American ’s 180th anniversary, we’re publishing a jigsaw every weekday to show off some of our most fascinating magazine covers over the years.
Learn what science payloads are being shipped aboard Cargo Dragon to the International Space Station on the SpaceX CRS-31 ...
Adrian Tchaikovsky is the award-winning author of many books of science fiction and fantasy, including The Children of Time, ...
Florida State University's Board of Trustees has approved the use of $22.5 million in auxiliary funding for the Seminoles' athletics program.
Kennedy Jr. poses a direct threat to American health. Far from restoring trust—Kennedy’s stated aim—this action dismantles a ...
John Brenkus won six Emmy Awards for his unique "Sport Science" segments that explained simply how and why things in sports ...
Earlier this year, I went to Career Day at my older kid’s school. The experience was sometimes humbling — at an elementary school career fair, no one can compete with the firefighters — but it was ...
The reality is nuanced because medicine is, to put it mildly, complicated. But we should in fact be careful about doling out diagnoses, says Dr. Suzanne O’Sullivan, an Irish neurologist and the author ...
Science isn’t perfect, and reporters who cover the issue say the public has a right to know when high-profile research contains mistakes — or worse, fudged results.
IGNOU’s all about structure, and your assignment’s front and cover page is like your intro track—it sets the tone. The front page is the first sheet with all the key details about you and your ...
The cover story in this month’s issue of National Geographic explores how origami, a centuries-old art of paper folding, is being put to use to blaze new trails in science and technology ...