News

Researchers taking the first-ever direct measurement of atom temperature in extremely hot materials inadvertently disproved a ...
A new study from researchers at Duke and Georgia Tech found that ocean waters are getting greener at the poles and bluer toward the equator.
This is a well-written study that presents a solid genetic screen to identify regulators of adipose morphology and remodeling in zebrafish. The authors generated a rigorous screening platform based on ...
Brain-inspired chips can slash AI energy use by as much as 100-fold, but the road to mainstream deployment is far from ...
Eight months past a federal deadline, more than 90 percent of at-risk Chicagoans haven’t been told their drinking water could ...
Made Plus, in business since 2021, converts plastic bottles into athletic shoes. Owner Alan Guyan is working to open a retail ...
NASA has discovered an interstellar comet that's wandered into our backyard. The space agency spotted the object with the sky-surveying Atlas telescope in Chile earlier this week, and has confirmed ...
California’s weather whiplash has left the Golden State in a place of severe uncertainty about its diminishing water supply and increasing human and environmental demands for water.
Texas lawmakers took steps big and small to help save the state’s water supply. A big one: investing $20 billion in water projects over the next two decades.
The state tests fish for a variety of different contaminants and issues a servings-per-month recommendation based on whichever individual contaminant is most elevated per species in each water body.
What started as a KSAT story investigating brown water in two Wilson County neighborhoods has since concluded in the creation of two new state laws.
Texas property owners can use nearly as much water under their land as they want. That’s unlikely to change even as the state approaches a crisis.