UnchartedX on MSN
What the Giza Plateau Reveals About the Lost Science of Sound
Deep beneath the Giza Plateau, researchers explore chambers with strange acoustic properties that may hold clues to how sound ...
CT Insider on MSN
CT Sea Grant researchers take seaweed science on the road to grow Connecticut's sugar kelp industry
One of the biggest challenges for Connecticut's few kelp farmers is a lack of hands-on training in nursery cultivation.
When a song has strong repetition, that becomes the network’s focus. The instructions for mentally replaying the song become ...
Live Science on MSN
Science history: First two-way phone call across outdoor lines made by Alexander Graham Bell — Oct. 9, 1876
On Oct. 9, 1876, Alexander Graham Bell made a telephone call to his assistant a few miles away — the first demonstration of ...
For hundreds of years, people who have lived near Seneca Lake in upstate New York have reported hearing loud booms coming from the water. No one is exactly sure why.
When startled, your brain and body activate the fight-or-flight response, flooding you with stress hormones. This rapid ...
The small, clumsy fish isn’t the strongest or fastest creature living in Puget Sound. But it has developed other tools to ...
Sound Off is an opinion forum for Mercury readers to offer brief comments on today’s news. Submissions must be 75 words or ...
Just as GPUs transformed AI by moving from games to general-purpose computing, quantum systems may one day power breakthroughs in how machines hear and interpret the world.
High-speed sensors have revealed that pianists’ fingertips can shape sound color through precise movements. This long-sought proof turns artistic intuition into measurable science.
Financial institutions are raising concerns about a potential AI investment bubble. The Bank of England on Wednesday warned ...
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