New SMU system controls microrobots without cameras, enabling use in hard-to-see environments like the human body.
Artemis II astronauts are returning to Earth after a historic lunar flyby, setting a new record for human spaceflight.
SMU researchers have created an electromagnetic coil system that can control microrobots without requiring continuous visual ...
HOT SPRINGS, Ark.- A new prehistoric adventure is coming to Hot Springs later this month. Mid-America Science Museum will ...
Striving to get some extra vitamin D in your life—whether it’s by eating fortified foods like breakfast cereals or yogurts, getting outside to soak up some extra sun, or poppin’ a daily supplement—is ...
As Cuba sinks into a humanitarian crisis under an intensified U.S. blockade, Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel sat down with ...
The president blamed a long awkward silence on communications issues caused by the long distance between him and the ...
Astronauts are flying by the Moon’s far side and setting records. Nature is in Houston with the mission’s scientists.
In their research, Hasenfratz, Catterall, and Butt used renormalization group (RG) theory to study the more complex phase ...
A research team at the University of Tokyo has developed a new microscopy platform that can observe a previously hidden layer ...
The astronauts will head into a communications blackout at 6:44 p.m. Eastern time as they become the first people to travel ...
The Artemis II astronauts are set to go the farthest into space than any other human has gone before, and will lose contact ...