
The World’s First Nuclear Clock Is Finally Ticking
After decades of work, physicists have finally broken into the atom to build the first nuclear clock

The World’s First Nuclear Clock Is Finally Ticking
After decades of work, physicists have finally broken into the atom to build the first nuclear clock

Baby Boomers Should Stand Up for New York City’s Congestion Pricing Plan
By canceling congestion pricing for drivers in New York City, the governor of New York State will hurt many retirees, who need the mass transport investments the move promised

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Tiny Spheres Key to Tunable ‘Smart Liquid’
Programmable liquids could aid robot grippers, shock absorption, acoustics, and more

We Should Engineer Better Learning in Our Schools
Students should learn about both the natural world and human-made—or engineered—one we live in

First Wooden Satellite Will Test ‘Green’ Space Exploration
Japan’s LignoSat will test wood’s resilience in space and could lead to a new era of more sustainable, less polluting satellites

Spiderweb Thread Inspires Ultrasmall Microphones
Sound recording could take a cue from arachnid acoustics

An Autonomous Logging Machine Could Make Forestry Safer
Forestry is deadly. Could automating some logging tasks help?

Ever Larger Cargo Ships Threaten Bridges, Ports and Other Structures
Cargo ships, like the one that caused the Baltimore bridge to collapse, are getting dangerously big

Baltimore Bridge Collapse Will Teach Engineers to Build Safer Infrastructure
The loss of Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge after a cargo ship collision will teach engineers how to design structures better able to withstand disasters

A Structural Engineer Explains Why the Baltimore Bridge Collapsed
A large container ship “totally removed” a critical pier from Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge

Collaborating in Person May Spark More Innovative Research
Bringing people together virtually doesn’t seem to boost disruptive research

The Amazing Aerial Adventures of Lilian Bland, the ‘Flying Feminist’
In 1910 an Anglo-Irish woman named Lilian Bland built a plane with little to no encouragement from her family or aviation enthusiasts. Shortly after the plane took off, she quit flying and moved on to her next challenge