Students and judges interact during the 70th annual Mid-Columbia Regional Science and Engineering Fair held this year at the ...
The building blocks of life on Earth may have been fueled by tiny sparks hopping between water droplets.
With water, dish soap, sugar, and optional sparkles, you can make your own bubbles. The science siblings demonstrated it.
Earth might be creating microscopic lightning bolts—and this electrical phenomenon could have sparked the chemistry of life ...
Young scientists at Mead Vale Primary School in Weston-super-Mare put their investigative skills to the test during Science ...
A study shows that electrical charges in sprays of water can cause chemical reactions that form organic molecules from inorganic materials. The findings provide evidence that microlightning may have ...
Clean water is essential for daily life and life science applications. Researchers use demineralization to maintain water quality, though traditional methods might not keep up with changing conditions ...
Life's building blocks may not have been crafted in the lightning flashes of a tempest, a new study suggests, so much as in ...
New research suggests tiny electrical charges in water droplets could have fueled the chemical reactions that led to life.
Successful test results of a new machine learning (ML) technique developed at Georgia Tech could help communities prepare for ...
Mars might hold enough subsurface water to cover its surface in a global ocean between 0.62 to 1.24 miles (1 to 2 kilometers) ...
Researchers at Ruhr University Bochum, Germany, have shed light on the structure of supercritical water. In this state, which ...