Engineering
Researchers have created a tech that can track health markers -- all from the toilet seat.
Someday, such supports could allow meat in the lab to grow from tiny hamburger-nuggets into something more like steak.
In North America, water companies may lose up to 50% of water before it ever reaches customers.
The lightweight sheets could combine hundreds of vibrating components to create tactile sensations.
Instead of packing more pixels into displays, engineers are learning how to trick our eyes and brains to see higher resolutions in the virtual world.
An experiment off the coast of California may bolster efforts to make biocrude from "the Sequoia of the sea."
A next-generation atom smasher would cost billions of dollars. Europe and China both plan to build one, but scientists are debating if it's worth it.
How you cover a trip to the moon and share the news with the world.
Half a century after Neil Armstrong stepped onto the Moon, can NASA recover the sense of adventure that sparked its Cold War triumph?
By mimicking the structure of mother-of-pearl, scientists have made a glass that's less likely to shatter when hit.
Setting up the field for the 'London Series' between the Boston Red Sox and the New York Yankees presents significant technical challenges.
So-called plastic crystals could open new avenues in the quest to make refrigerators with only solid components.