You should never drive in a car with no windows. But if you ever do find yourself in one, you can use physics to get your bearings.
To understand how universes might inflate and bump into each other in the hypothetical multiverse, physicists are studying digital and physical analogs of the process.
Physicists finally achieved the long-sought goal, but there’s a catch: Their compound requires crushing pressures to keep from falling apart.
You might think of it as the force that slows things down, but you literally couldn't get anywhere without it.
Stephen Hawking once proposed that unseen “primordial” black holes might be the hidden dark matter. A series of new studies shows how it can work.
For one thing, let's build a model of air drag and how it affects the ball differently when it's traveling faster and slower than the speed of sound.
After repurposing facial recognition and deepfake tech to study galaxies and the Higgs boson, physicists think they can help shape the responsible use of AI.
The rectangular peg problem asks a seemingly simple question: Does a closed loop include the corners of every kind of rectangle?
Researchers say there are three possible explanations for the anomalous data: One is mundane. Two would revolutionize physics.
The kilogram is now based on energy changes in the quantum world rather than a physical object. Here's how that works.