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- 20/3/9 23:36
"The administration is completely absent. They have left the penitentiary police in jeopardy," an official said of the...
270 articles from MONDAY 9.3.2020
"The administration is completely absent. They have left the penitentiary police in jeopardy," an official said of the...
Photos showed the ship passing under the Golden Gate Bridge as it approached the port of Oakland around noon on...
People across the globe are quarantining out of concern for the virus and, in some cases, due to government...
A study provides new details about the collective motion of individual agents in a liquid-crystal-like system, which could help in better understanding bacterial colonies, structures and systems in the human body, and other forms of active matter.
It’ll sap funding and political will—but actually, it should.
There's no evidence that dogs, cats, or other household pets are in danger from coronavirus. But you should still wash your hands of their...
On the one-year anniversary of an Ethiopian Airlines crash that killed 157 people — including 18 Canadians — MPs are looking to dig deeper into the federal government's decision to approve the Boeing 737 Max as safe to...
Turtle ant soldiers look like real-life creatures straight out of a Japanese anime film. These tree-dwelling insects scuttle to and fro sporting shiny, adorably oversized heads, which they use to block the entrances of their nests—essentially acting as living doors.
Botanist Cody Coyotee Howard compares bulbs to living bunkers. With an underground stockpile of resources, bulbs can hunker down during disasters and spring up faster than other plants when conditions turn balmy.
Flocks of starlings that produce dazzling patterns across the sky are natural examples of active matter—groups of individual agents coming together to create collective dynamics. In a study featured on the cover of the March 6 issue of the journal Science, a team of researchers that includes Brown University physicists reveals new insights into what happens inside active matter systems.