Researchers discovered that prebiotics could help us recover faster from a disturbed sleep cycle
Cosmic Concrete: all it takes is dust and a little astronaut blood to build low-cost homes in space
How a scoop of sugar could make batteries capable of storing up to five times more energy a real possibility
New research center aims to combat the ever growing threat of space junk
Having too much spare time may be nearly as bad for you as having not enough
How do land birds cross entire oceans without taking a single break?
About 27% of all sun-like stars devour their own planets
New technology can detect a heart attack before it happens
Our four-legged friends can distinguish between humans doing something on purpose and doing something by accident
Biologists discovered a gorgeous new dragon-like lizard species in the premontane forest of the Río Huallaga basin
Why you don't actually need 8 hours of sleep per night
Why living in a green neighborhood is good for your heart
Exercise lowers the number of calories expended at rest in obese people
Mysterious rhythmic fast radio burst not caused by the strong stellar wind from a companion star as suspected
A Dutch team of astronomers has found that the repeating pattern in the cosmic radio flash FRB20180916B is not caused by the strong stellar wind from a companion star, as previously suspected. Instead, the flashes may come from a highly magnetized but solitary neutron star called a magnetar. The astronomers made this discovery within a unique combination of observations with two of the largest radio telescopes in the world: LOFAR and Westerbork.