Physics

  1. Earth

    Don’t flip out: Earth’s magnetic poles aren’t about to switch

    Earth’s waning magnetic field is returning to its long-term average, not heading toward a catastrophic magnetic reversal, new lava analysis suggests.

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  2. Planetary Science

    Bright minds, antineutrinos and more reader feedback

    In the November 28, 2015, issue of Science News, readers discussed humanizing science, frog mating calls, antineurtrinos and Martian dust storms.

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  3. Quantum Physics

    More tests confirm quantum spookiness

    New experimental results confirm and strengthen evidence for the “spooky” reality of quantum physics.

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  4. Physics

    Water droplets spontaneously bounce, sans trampoline

    Initially stationary water droplets can bounce on an extremely water-repellent surface as if on a trampoline.

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  5. Physics

    Water droplets spontaneously bounce, sans trampoline

    Initially stationary water droplets can bounce on an extremely water-repellent surface as if on a trampoline.

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  6. Science & Society

    Quantum spookiness, magnetic mysteries and more feedback

    Letters and comments from readers on quantum spookiness, Earth's magnetic field, and more.

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  7. Particle Physics

    Antiprotons match protons in response to strong nuclear force

    The first study of how antiprotons interact with each other reveals yet again that particles of antimatter behave just like their ordinary matter counterparts.

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  8. Tech

    Electronic skin feels the heat, hears the sound

    Electronic skin inspired by human fingertips detects texture, pressure, heat and sound.

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  9. Physics

    Acoustic tractor beam reels in objects like the Death Star

    A platform tiled with ultrasound-emitting speakers can get small objects to hover, spin, move around and get reeled in as if pulled by a tractor beam.

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  10. Quantum Physics

    Light mimics hotel with limitless vacancies

    By mimicking a mathematician’s method for creating vacancies in a hotel with an infinite number of rooms, physicists may have found a way of increasing the amount of data that can be carried via light.

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  11. Quantum Physics

    Quantum interpretations feel the heat

    Landauer’s principle shows a way to test competing interpretations about quantum physics.

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  12. Quantum Physics

    Confirmed: Quantum mechanics is weird

    The first demonstration of a loophole-free Bell test validates the weirdness of quantum physics.

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