News

For more than a century, the well-known 18-electron rule has guided the field of organometallic chemistry. Now, researchers at Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology (OIST), in collaboration with ...
Jeanne Williams, the new Jackson/Hinds library director, is tackling aging buildings, funding gaps and public trust in a push to revive the system.
JoSAA announced the Round 4 seat allotment results for BTech admissions 2025, revealing institute-wise and category-wise opening and closing ranks. Candidates allotted seats must complete online ...
I’ve spent much of my long life studying — and trying to understand — the history of the universe. Along the way, I have been constantly reminded that science is essentially international: Science ...
New fields are opening up all the time, and choosing the right course early on can set you up for a successful and ...
In a new communications landscape that feasts on polarization, the science community needs to rethink how it engages society ...
Earlier this year, we spotted a forthcoming study which reported that levels of taurine did not consistently decline with age. But we knew Science had published research on this topic in 2023 that ...
Laura Spinney’s “Proto: How One Ancient Language Went Global” explores the roots of language and how it spread and changed across time and place.
The use of artificial intelligence (AI) is exploding across many branches of science. Between 2012 and 2022, the average proportion of scientific papers engaging with AI, across 20 fields ...
Over the past 20 years, certain branches of science have endured a so-called reproducibility crisis, in which countless papers have been exposed as shoddy if not bogus.
Tree branches in art throughout history follow geometric rules related to fractal geometry. ‘Almond blossom’ by Vincent van Gogh.
The science of branching One goal of mathematical biology is to synthesize what scientists know about the vast diversity of living systems—where there seems to be an exception to every rule ...