
My childhood in science
The story of the author’s extremely early career

My childhood in science
The story of the author’s extremely early career
Why some irrational numbers are more irrational than others
How viruses may reshape the body’s ‘soil’ to promote cancer growth
Craig Venter
Today’s Killer Sudoku

Science Quiz: What's a trillion?
Ancient human ancestors may have first used fire 1.79 million years ago
JWST catches cosmic imposters spoofing faraway galaxies

U.S. science is in chaos
On our radar
Craig Venter
My childhood in science
When science is under siege, history offers a playbook
Atul Gawande
Dozens of countries are trying to lure U.S. scientists abroad—and it’s working
Inside U.S. labs at a moment of fear—and unexpected promise
What people get wrong about scientists
Create as many words as you can!
Stretch your math muscles with these puzzles.

Why we'll never live in space
The puzzle of the first black holes
What if we never find dark matter?
Learning from unexpected results: This neuroscientist is redefining how the brain learns
How Erini Lambrides went from seeking theater stardom to studying the stars at NASA
Disclosure Day raises a big question: How do you talk to aliens?
Inside the high-stakes effort to bring natural grass to World Cup stadiums

U.S. science is in chaos
How did we get here?

World-first: therapy to make cells young again given to a person
The first participant has been treated in a landmark clinical trial of cellular reprogramming, which aims to rejuvenate aging cells

Russia seeks mathematician’s extradition
Mikhail Verbitsky was detained at an Armenian airport last Thursday on charges of inciting terrorism

Dozens of countries are trying to lure U.S. scientists abroad—and it’s working
The great American brain drain could define science for a generation

Japan’s 2011 earthquake was so powerful that it shifted the entire country’s location
This “extraordinary” event was likely caused by seismic waves bouncing off Earth’s core, researchers found

Science confirms: Cats help you only when there’s something in it for them
Dogs spontaneously aid struggling humans the way young children do—whereas cats wait until they stand to benefit