Mike Marcum didn’t have a lab, funding, or a PhD. Just a pile of salvaged electronics — and a theory. One night in Missouri, he fired up his homemade device. It formed a vortex. He tossed in a screw.
But is he really dead? We have our doubts. Here's why.
We recapped and reviewed Stranger Things 5 episode 6, “Escape From Camazotz,” live here at Winter is Coming. We don’t have to ...
Concorde’s Mach-2 eclipse chase (30 June 1973) set the airborne totality record of 74 minutes and cemented its legacy as a ...
Bairong Inc. (the "Company", "we" , "us" or "our" ; HKEX: 6608), a leading cloud-based AI turnkey service provider, ...
We're helping you uncover what's on sale at great low prices for those last minute giftsBy Samantha B. GordonFor Super ...
Step inside the strange world of a superfluid, a liquid that can flow endlessly without friction, defying the common-sense ...
China has broken its own record in hypergravity research after completing construction of its multi-tonne centrifuge that can ...
A team of researchers affiliated with UNIST has made a significant breakthrough by mathematically proving that a special type of vortex pair, called the Sadovskii vortex patch, can exist within ideal ...
The Bambu Lab P1S 3D Printer is about as easy as this hobby can get, with simple setup, one-button printing from an app, auto ...
The Linac Coherent Light Source in California has been firing record-breaking X-ray pulses for years, but now it’s due for a ...
A disruptive polar vortex is set to usher in three successive waves of Arctic air across the central and eastern United States through mid-December, bringing dangerously low temperatures and the ...