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The cells in your ears aren’t the only ones listening: recent research suggests that crucial cells throughout the body may respond to audible sound. Experiments described in Communications Biology ...
To celebrate Scientific American ’s 180th anniversary, we’re publishing a jigsaw every weekday to show off some of our most ...
Microwave satellite data are key to capturing major changes in a hurricane’s strength, such as when a storm undergoes rapid ...
Scientific American is part of Springer Nature, which owns or has commercial relations with thousands of scientific ...
But there’s another consequence of meditation that people do not always anticipate. Despite the ways in which wellness ...
A certain species of sea slug steals chloroplasts from algae and houses its contraband in special organelles that it can raid ...
Close stellar encounters could change the structure of our planetary system, potentially dooming Earth or other worlds to ...
A rapidly warming Arctic is driving long-lasting summer extremes, such as this month’s sweltering temperatures, new research ...
Recent observations have revealed carbon monoxide venting from the largest comet ever seen, providing clues about its origins ...
Claims that an asteroid or comet airburst destroyed the biblical Sodom captured the public’s imagination. Its retraction ...
The finished dugout canoe before departure, with leaf wave guards at the bow ( right) and stern ( left ). Vertical sticks at ...
Surprising new work bucks 50 years of assumptions about the trade-offs between computation space and time “This progress is ...