Once every 12 years, Earth, Jupiter, Uranus, and Neptune all line up, opening a window for a joint mission. Our next chance arrives in 2034.
A mid-flight scare reveals how embracing death can bring purpose and meaning to everyday life.
In 'Human History on Drugs,' Sam Kelly explores what the research can tell us about one of history’s most brilliant — and troubled — artists.
'Virtually everything we're taught about sexuality for the first two decades of our lives is wrong.'
'It's a very, very beautiful calculation, but it's the best example I know of the relationship between these rather abstract quantities perhaps and something that you can look at in a telescope.'
The CMB has long been considered the Big Bang's 'smoking gun' evidence. But after what JWST saw, might it come from early galaxies instead?
In 'The Microbiome Master Key,' Brett and Jessica Finlay argue that we need to stop waging war on all germs and start working with the microbes that make us who we are.
Our nearby Ring Nebula, with JWST's eyes, shows evidence for planet formation. Will the Sun eventually destroy, and then replace, the Earth?
The ocean is evolving, and it’s not based on the ‘survival of the fittest.’ Astrobiologist Betül Kaçar explains how it’s not competition that has kept the ocean alive, but collaboration.
Sam Kelly is a history grad from Stanford University and is on the autism spectrum....