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A levitating vehicle might someday explore the moon, asteroids, and other airless planetary surfaces.
If you put very fine black powder powder in a confined space it explodes in a cloud of heat, gas and noise.
New ideas inevitably face opposition. A new book called "The Human Element" argues that overcoming opposition requires understanding the concepts of "Fuel" and "Friction."
A new “common-sense” approach to computer vision enables artificial intelligence that interprets scenes more accurately than other systems do.
One day, we could fly across the U.S. in half an hour. A state-of-the-art hypersonic flight testing facility at UTSA could help make that dream a reality.
A century ago, electric cars were common. The fact that they were almost entirely replaced due to the internal combustion engine is a testament to the glacial pace of battery breakthroughs.
With launch, deployment, calibration, and science operations about to commence, here are 10 facts that are absolutely true.
In America, Cup Noodles has succeeded by hiding its Japanese roots.
Humanoid robots are coming, and Ameca is designed to be the ideal platform to study human-robot interactions.
Digital currencies are set to upend paper currencies, but it likely won't be the decentralized utopia some hope it will be.
With sea levels rising, the Dutch are pondering floating cities — while also exporting their engineering know-how to turn a tidy profit.
Leadership training can have huge dividends, when it's done right. Here are seven best practices for building a leadership development program that works.
SpinLaunch's launcher, which is larger than the Statue of Liberty and works like the Olympic hammer-throw event, just came online in the New Mexico desert.
Between fake vaccine passports and targeted supply chain attacks, things are only getting more risky.
Why does Seattle continue to be a place that nurtures the development of breakthrough technologies but not Minneapolis, Memphis, or Minsk?
Employees are quitting at record rates – a trend that shows no signs of stopping.
Are we really only a moment away from "The Singularity," a technological epoch that will usher in a new era in human evolution?
A new control system, demonstrated using MIT’s robotic mini cheetah, enables four-legged robots to jump across uneven terrain in real-time.