The Exciting Science Show comes to Torch Theatre on February 18, featuring live experiments, volcanoes and family fun this half-term.
You can't see, feel, hear, taste or smell them, but tiny particles from space are constantly raining down on us.
Spencer Axani, assistant professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy, is the inventor of CosmicWatch, a portable, ...
Happiness research has found we get more joy from active, challenging experiences than from passive consumption. So go somewhere new, grab the karaoke mic and leap out of your comfort zone ...
The Bartlett Maine Estate Winery in Gouldsboro is for sale, as its founders, famous for their complex, award-winning ...
"Mortal Kombat" changed the video game landscape, leading to a wave of imitators. Some of them were enjoyable in their own ...
In 2025, one of Scioto County’s newest nonprofit organizations, the Kitchen Collective, launched many programs to benefit the ...
Comic Book Resources on MSN
Grant Morrison and Frank Quitely's We3 is a comic you should be reading
This comic masterfully exposes the dark reality of animal experimentation through the lens of an epic escape story with a ...
But buzz alone isn’t enough to justify a twist that cuts against the show’s core strength. The Traitors doesn’t need smoke ...
Morning Overview on MSN
8,000 galaxy survey finds black holes exploding in strange boom
Across the sky, astronomers are stitching together vast samples of galaxies to understand how often supermassive black holes ...
Notre Dame professor Katie Bibedorf, better known as Kate the Chemist, joins TODAY to share entertaining science experiments ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
CosmicWatch: Handheld device democratizes study of cosmic particles from exploding stars
The CosmicWatch device costs only $100 to make, making it accessible for both high school students and spacecraft operators.
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