
Miniature Neutrino Detector Promises to Test the Laws of Physics
A relatively small detector caught neutrinos from a nuclear reactor using a technique known as coherent scattering

Miniature Neutrino Detector Promises to Test the Laws of Physics
A relatively small detector caught neutrinos from a nuclear reactor using a technique known as coherent scattering
A Few Days This Summer Really Will Go by Faster Than Usual. Here’s Why
515-Mile-Long Lightning Megaflash Sets New World Record
Hidden Lake Bursts through Greenland Ice in ‘Extremely Surprising’ Event
Spellements: Thursday, July 31, 2025

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Why the Russian Earthquake Didn’t Cause a Huge Tsunami
What Books Scientific American Read in July
Allergens May Make Us Cough and Sneeze by Poking Holes in Airway Cells
The Brain Fires Up Immune Cells When Sick People Are Nearby
How an Article about the H-Bomb Landed Scientific American in the Middle of the Red Scare
Reckoning with Our Mistakes
Jigsaws: SciAm Cover Art
Evolution of the Scientific American Logo

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The Secret to the Strongest Force in the Universe
Why Aren’t We Made of Antimatter?
Summer Meteor Showers, Short Summer Days and Ancient Arthropods
What It’s Like to Live and Work on the Greenland Ice Sheet
Bring These Scientific American–Recommended Books to the Beach This Summer
Were the Wright Brothers First in Flight? Inside a 1925 Dispute

Why the Russian Earthquake Didn’t Cause a Huge Tsunami
Russia’s magnitude 8.8 earthquake spawned serious tsunami warnings, but waves have been moderate so far. Here’s the geological reason why

When the Sun Becomes a Red Giant, Will Any Planet Be Safe?
The future is bright—too bright—for life as we know it once the sun transforms into a red giant star

You Don’t Remember Being a Baby, but Your Brain Was Making Memories
Brain scans capture memory formation in babies, raising new questions about why people forget their earliest years

Archaeologists Stumble upon Tomb of Ancient Maya City’s First Ruler
A team of archaeologists excavating the ancient Maya city of Caracol discovered the tomb of its first ruler, which contained pottery, jadeite jewelry and a rare death mask

Russia’s 8.8 Earthquake Is One of the Strongest Ever Recorded
Russia’s earthquake was estimated at magnitude 8.8, among the strongest since scientists began monitoring

Hidden Lake Bursts through Greenland Ice in ‘Extremely Surprising’ Event
Water usually flows downward, but something strange happened under Greenland’s ice sheet when a deluge punched through the surface to scour an area nearly twice the size of New York’s Central Park