Researchers from the United Kingdom and Austria have developed an artificial intelligence tool that can speed up the modeling ...
Jupiter harbors more oxygen than the sun, a new study finds, giving astronomers a crucial clue about how our solar system's ...
A Walk in Their Shoes was designed to help senior living staff — and later, family members and first responders — better ...
Professor Dallas Trinkle and colleagues have provided the first quantitative explanation for how magnetic fields slow carbon ...
A $1 million prize awaits anyone who can show where the math of fluid flow breaks down. With specially trained AI systems, ...
A computer simulation ordered by the government showed that everyone on board would have survived if the concrete berm had ...
But when a role is genuinely different, fresh qualities matter. The transition to management is an obvious breakpoint. The ...
This is read by an automated voice. Please report any issues or inconsistencies here. In what used to be a dry cleaner’s on Sunset Boulevard, Robert Lempert listened, hands clasped behind his back, as ...
Board game pieces are placed during a wargame exercise at Dyess Air Force Base, Texas, Sept. 16, 2025. (Airman William Neal/U.S. Air Force) The U.S. Air Force is turning to artificial intelligence to ...
Duarte Pita Dias is based in CBS News' London bureau, where he works across digital platforms and for TV broadcasts. Holly Williams is a CBS News senior foreign correspondent based in the network's ...
One of the most influential science studies of all time started with a modest minicomputer, some simulated boxes of water molecules, and a grand vision for computer-aided chemistry. The year was 1982.
The United Arab Emirates is quietly positioning itself as a global leader in urban air mobility, turning futuristic concepts of autonomous flying taxis and delivery drones into a regulated, testable ...