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CEOs and celebrities love Oura’s sleep-tracking ring. Its CEO has a plan to stay ahead of Apple and Google
One of the Apple Watch’s biggest threats has no screen, weighs about a fifth of an ounce and charges a monthly subscription for most of its features. Yet the Oura ring is on pace for $1 billion in
Interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS wasn't supposed to be there — meet the astronomer who discovered it
Denneau is part of the team behind ATLAS — short for Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System — a network of wide-field telescopes that repeatedly images huge swaths of sky to catch anything
Wantagh senior published in scientific journal for badminton research
The senior is a member of the varsity badminton team, and researched which racquet strings might be best for playing the sport.
Ultrashort laser pulses capture a snapshot of a molecular handshake
Ultrashort bursts of laser light are giving scientists a way to freeze one of chemistry’s most elusive moments, the instant when two molecules briefly share electrons before flying apart. By catching
Satellite megaconstellations may 'photobomb' over 95% of telescope images
Researchers claim that over 95% of the images captured by low-orbit telescopes will possibly be destroyed in the face of 500,000 satellites.
Flying with whales: Drones are remaking marine mammal research
Knowable Magazine reports that drones are revolutionizing whale research by safely collecting data and minimizing disturbances to marine life.
Dec. 17, 2017: Arecibo images a near-Earth asteroid
Following months of hindered radar observations caused by Hurricane Maria's power outages, the Arecibo Observatory Planetary Radar came back online just in time to observe asteroid 3200 Phaethon as
Italy’s bears are showing genetic signs of domestication
A new study shows how long-term coexistence with humans can reshape even the wildest predators—in this case, making bears less aggressive.
Scientists make breakthrough that could revolutionize what happens to common waste: 'Promising'
It could make things easier for consumers. Scientists make breakthrough that could revolutionize what happens to common waste: 'Promising' first appeared on The Cool Down.
Study finds African rainforests now emit more carbon than they absorb
Africa’s great rainforests were long treated as a quiet ally in the climate fight, soaking up vast quantities of carbon dioxide and helping to steady a warming planet. New research now shows that
💥 Why didn't the universe annihilate itself at birth?
Why does the Universe exist instead of having been annihilated shortly after its birth? This fundamental question in physics finds new illumination thanks to an unprecedented collaboration
Microplastics may be leaking invisible chemical clouds into rivers and oceans
Plastic pollution is no longer just a story of bottles and bags drifting across the surface of the sea. As larger debris breaks down, it sheds microscopic fragments that quietly seep chemicals into
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