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In 1914, Indian mathematician Srinivasa Ramanujan published a short paper detailing several unusual formulas for calculating ...
Astronauts aboard the ISS have captured rare, invisible lightning phenomena hidden above Earth’s storms, revealing explosive ...
Throughout 2025, there have been several chances to spot the Northern Lights across Canada. The best of all these ...
A new study reveals that artificial intelligence image generators often lack originality, repeatedly producing pictures from ...
A new theoretical study suggests fusion reactors could do more than generate energy, they might also produce particles linked to dark matter. Researchers at the University of Cincinnati say they have ...
A microscope that cost less than £50 and took under 3 hours to build using a common 3D printer could be transformative for ...
Scientists from the University of Pennsylvania (Penn) and the University of Michigan have created the world's smallest autonomous and programmable robots. Each measuring about 200 micrometers wide – ...
WIRED spoke with DeepMind’s Pushmeet Kohli about the recent past—and promising future—of the Nobel Prize-winning research ...
Everyone knows the number 3.14, at school it is something that is obligatory to learn and, subsequently, to know how to use.
Written as pure mathematics in 1914, Ramanujan’s formulas lay unnoticed for a century. Scientists now say they mirror the ...
Ramanujan’s century-old pi formula is finding new relevance in modern physics, with scientists linking his mathematics to ...