How do you map something you can’t see? For astronomers studying the Milky Way, the answer lies in radio waves-the very lowest frequencies that slip past the dust and gas obscuring our galaxy’s heart.
The Milky Way is a rich and complex environment. We see it as a luminous line stretching across the night sky, composed of ...
Imagine you are a security guard in one of those casino heist movies where your ability to recognize an emerging crime will ...
New research shows that the brain’s ability to detect subtle visual changes—like spotting an anomaly on a security monitor—depends on theta-frequency brain waves (3–6 Hz) that rhythmically sweep ...
Astronomers in Australia have created the largest and most detailed low-frequency radio image ever made of the Milky Way, ...
Minute Audio Program Enters Brainwave Entrainment Sector Amid Surging Consumer Interest in Non-Invasive Focus Enhancement Solutions ...
Astronomers are on the verge of unlocking an entirely new way to observe the universe. Since the first detection of gravitational waves in October 2015, scientists have been listening in to these ...
Electromagnetic waves with frequencies between microwave and infrared light, also known as terahertz radiation, are leveraged ...
On two days in the course of every year, one in March heralding the start of spring and another in September marking the first of fall, the Earth’s axis of rotation aligns perpendicular to the rays of ...
It might feel unseasonably hot where you are right now. That's thanks in part to a heat wave in the Pacific Ocean.