- Incredible Re-Run of the Double Slit Experiment Proves Einstein Wrong Again extremetech.com
- MIT Just Proved Einstein Wrong in the Most Famous Quantum Experiment SciTechDaily
- Niels Bohr defeated Einstein: scientists created a diffraction grating…
Category: 1. Edi-Choice
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Incredible Re-Run of the Double Slit Experiment Proves Einstein Wrong Again – extremetech.com
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4 Science Book Recommendations We Loved Reading in July
What Books Scientific American Read in July
Check out Scientific American’s fiction and nonfiction book recommendations for July
Fernando Trabanco Fotografía/Getty Images
July 2025 has been a…
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‘This wasn’t obvious’: the potato evolved from a tomato ancestor, researchers find | Biology
When it comes to the senses, there could not be a greater difference between Friday night chips and juicy Mediterranean tomatoes.
However, scientists have discovered that these two foods are not so far from each other after all. Landmark research…
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Where did the potato come from? Tomatoes, 9 million years ago, apparently. – The Washington Post
- Where did the potato come from? Tomatoes, 9 million years ago, apparently. The Washington Post
- ‘This wasn’t obvious’: the potato evolved from a tomato ancestor, researchers find The Guardian
- Scientists finally know where potatoes come…
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SpaceX Set to Launch NASA’s Crew-11 Mission to the Space Station – The New York Times
- SpaceX Set to Launch NASA’s Crew-11 Mission to the Space Station The New York Times
- Live coverage: Former members of Crew-9, Starliner-1 missions unite to fly to the Space Station Spaceflight Now
- WATCH: NASA’s SpaceX Dragon Crew-11 set to blast…
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Why Do Allergens Make Us Cough and Sneeze?
Allergens May Make Us Cough and Sneeze by Poking Holes in Airway Cells
The immune system senses damage to cell membranes caused by pore-forming proteins and mounts a response
Fcafotodigital/Getty Images
The…
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Weirdly Hot Rocks in New England Traced to 80-Million-Year-Old Greenland Rift
Roughly 124 miles (200 kilometers) beneath the Appalachian Mountains in New England lies the aptly named Northern Appalachian Anomaly (NAA), a mysterious 218-mile-wide (350-km) region of unusually hot…
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Miniature Neutrino Detector Catches Elusive Particles at Nuclear Reactor
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 nuclear power plant in…
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Collaboration or collapse — Why Earth observation must be a global mission
Around the world, international borders are hardening. Nations are competing for resources, technology and even orbits. But in Vienna this June, a different vision took center stage. One where space is shared, data is open and no satellite…
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Brains React to Signs of Illness—Even When It’s Not Real
The Brain Fires Up Immune Cells When Sick People Are Nearby
When people viewed virtual avatars with coughs or rashes, their brain triggered an immune response
Brain areas that help to monitor the envelope of…
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