From lunar nights to Martian dust storms: why batteries struggle in space
As plans for Moon bases gather pace across the globe, battery science may decide whether humans can live beyond Earth.
Latest technology news
As plans for Moon bases gather pace across the globe, battery science may decide whether humans can live beyond Earth.
AI is replacing tasks we have grown reluctant to do ourselves – thinking, writing, creating, analysing.
The vote in the Lords took place on an amendment to the government’s Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill.
To have a healthy relationship with AI, we must see beauty in imperfection.
Firms will add new products to their ranges – but they’re unlikely to abandon reliable profits from unhealthy foods.
When cargo falls into the sea, it becomes an accidental ocean currents experiment.
Brain stimulation devices have been marketed as a drug-free alternative to ADHD medication. But a major new UK trial found no evidence they work.
‘Hamnet,’ focussed on Shakespeare’s wife Agnes as a healer, brings forward stronger readings of a character who’s been at the centre of feminist criticism and western pop culture: Ophelia in Hamlet.
For many employees, flexibility is no longer a nice-to-have luxury but a fundamental requirement. Yet many requests are still being turned down.
Infinite Jest is a kind of geological cross-section of a writer and a literary culture at a moment of major upheaval.
Tokenisation works by converting real assets into tradeable digital tokens. But New Zealand’s regulatory uncertainty risks investment billions migrating offshore.
You don’t need any special hacks – but taking a few simple precautions can save you from pain or an infection.
Its ice sheet could theoretically melt and raise the sea by 7 metres.
In the past, crisis leadership has skewed towards displays of strength over compassion. New research suggests something is shifting.
Only 19 of the 60 countries invited by the US president have signed up to membership.
Greenland is central to US Space Force strategies for orbital dominance. Laws and treaties designed to maintain the peace in space are looking increasingly outdated.
Edwin Mtei, Tanzania’s first central bank governor, showed that people can hold different views without enmity.
The atmosphere is a complicated place. Warm temperatures in one spot can contribute to brutally cold storms somewhere else.
Addie Keys' eyes lit up when some of her Professional Women's Hockey League idols took the ice in Halifax last month, and she's one of many fans who wants a team in her city.
U.S. President Donald Trump warned Canada it could face 100 per cent tariffs over expanded trade ties with China, escalating tensions between Washington and Ottawa.