Kitchen sink experiment simulates exotic white holes
White holes – theoretical opposites of black holes – so far exist only on paper, but a new experiment confirms we simulate their behaviour whenever we turn on the kitchen tap
White holes – theoretical opposites of black holes – so far exist only on paper, but a new experiment confirms we simulate their behaviour whenever we turn on the kitchen tap
The father of fractal geometry spent his career searching for the hidden order in nature
On Friday, the gigantic drilling machine Sissi broke through the last 1.5 metres of rock to complete the Gotthard Base rail tunnel in Switzerland
Are you ready for the massive hidden reality promised by supersymmetry? Or the evolution of quantum mechanics? How about a black hole in your tool shed?
James Kakalios takes an original and highly readable approach to his subject in The Amazing Story of Quantum Mechanics
Forget finding the laws of evolution. The history of life is just one damn thing after another
Can science teach us right from wrong? New Scientist explores the insights of a new generation of researchers who say it can
Which of the 50 ideas presented this week and last do you think is most likely to change the face of science? Tell us, and you could win a tablet PC
Clues to how these ocean giants survived the last ice age may be lurking in a population of grey whales off the Canada’s Pacific coast
Whether T. Rex were fearsome predators or cowardly scavengers is hotly disputed. Now it seems the legendary dinosaurs were cannibals