This new posture and evasive swimming behavior cause the trout to spin off two underwater vortex rings in opposite directions ...
Social media influencers claim red light therapy can deliver everything from younger-looking skin to more hair growth, better sleep and even boost longevity. Does science back up those claims?
The science fiction blockbuster wowed audiences with its depiction of space travel and more. Here's what NASA staff and other ...
NPR's science podcast Short Wave brings us stories on food fortification, why some people don't seem to get the flu, and a study on how much vigorous exercise you really need.
March 12, 2026 • NPR's Ailsa Chang speaks with costume designer Ruth E. Carter, who is now nominated for the fifth time for ...
The Artemis II astronauts are on a course back to Earth after flying by the moon Monday, witnessing a solar eclipse, and ...
NPR's Scott Detrow talks to science writer Joel Achenbach about what NASA accomplished on the Artemis II mission, and where ...
The result supports earlier studies that used brain imaging to find evidence that the same neural circuits are involved in ...
NPR's A Martinez talks to Paul Hayne, a planetary scientist at University of Colorado Boulder, about what he and others working on future moon missions hope to learn from Artemis II.
A new study finds that looking at something and imagining it triggers the same exact process in the brain. It's also very similar to the process artificial intelligence uses to create an image.
NPR's Short Wave team talks about a wildflower's ability to adapt to climate change, the grooming habits of birds, and the social lives of sharks. Time now for our science news roundup from Short Wave ...
NPR's Scott Detrow speaks with NASA's Kelsey Evans Young, the Artemis science flight operations lead, about the rigors of space and the lunar slingshot to get home.