As global competitors race to weaponize AI, U.S. military leaders have repeatedly warned that speed and control of AI systems ...
Opinion
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Why ships keep their propellers at the stern, the hydrodynamics, steering, and engineering logic explained
From early steamships to modern azipods, this breaks down the hydrodynamic, mechanical, and safety reasons ships push rather than pull through the water, and why placing the propeller ahead of the ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Physicists spotted hidden order inside brutal proton collisions
Inside the most powerful particle colliders on Earth, protons slam together at nearly the speed of light, shredding matter ...
The complex fluid–structure interaction underlying blood flow through vessels has proved challenging to analyze both ...
For years, strange and perfect circles have been appearing on the ocean floor, now scientists are finally uncovering the ...
Digital twin (DT) technology is emerging as a core solution for future marine development and intelligent ocean management. The review systematically reviews digital twin applications in the marine ...
High-speed imaging of charged droplet dynamics reveals a critical transition in the role of non-uniform AC electric fields on ...
A satellite captured a Tsunami from space for the first time, revealing why the 2025 Kamchatka earthquake was less destructive than 1952.
Indian Defence Review on MSN
Energy Without Limits: Physicists Engineer a Perfect Conductor from Ultracold Atoms
Physicists have created a perfect conductor from ultracold atoms, enabling energy to flow without resistance, forever!
For the first time, physicists in Italy have created a 'lump soliton': an extremely stable packet of light waves which can travel through 3D space, and even interact with other solitons without losing ...
THERE has been a flood of books on the A theory of the motion of fluids within the past few years. Some are good and others are not so good. Seventy-nine years ago, Besant published his “Treatise on ...
At 4 a.m., while most of New Jersey slept, a Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) physicist sat at his computer connected to a control room 3,500 miles away in Oxford, England. Years of ...
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