A hydrovoltaics based sensor developed by Korean researchers can detect fire in 5-10 seconds and also generate electricity on its own.
Researchers used the CRIRES+ instrument on ESO's Very Large Telescope (VLT) to map the weather and composition of WASP-127b.
DEEP Robotics’ Lynx wows in a fun video, showcasing its wheeled agility with dances, ice glides, and moves built for tough ...
Hydrogen has the potential to be the clean fuel in the future, but its adoption is riddled with hurdles. These startups are ...
Musk’s criticisms have escalated into legal actions. In February, he filed a lawsuit against OpenAI, accusing it of breaching ...
The bridge in Guizhou province, China, will be nearly twice as high as the Eiffel Tower and have the largest span in a ...
The B61-12 nuclear bombs, which have now been deployed in Europe, are equipped with a 50-kiloton warhead and utilizes an ...
A coin-sized ultra-broadband electro-optic comb achieves 450 nm precision, enhancing bandwidth and efficiency for advanced ...
Watch How America’s Upgrading its Nuclear Arsenal to Counter New Threats on Interesting Engineering. Explore the latest in ...
Tokamak Energy receives a new 1 MW gyrotron to superheat plasma in its ST40 fusion device, advancing the development of ...
The design uses the features of seawater to its advantage by utilizing the sodium, chloride, and sulfate ions as the battery's electrolyte.
UCLA researchers develop PEDOT nanofibers with exceptional energy storage capabilities, paving the way for advanced ...