Music culture has always been about more than sound. It is about timing, restraint, and emotional build-up. From the way an ...
Music has always been about timing. Long before streaming platforms and digital feeds, listeners learned to appreciate ...
Engineers have created a device that generates incredibly tiny, earthquake-like vibrations on a microchip—and it could ...
One intriguing method that could be used to form the qubits needed for quantum computers involves electrons hovering above ...
Running is very popular worldwide, with hundreds of thousands of people enjoying this activity every day.1 Significant ...
M odern smart watches can measure an array of health indicators. Step counts and heart rates sit at the simpler end, while ...
Scientists are using lasers, satellites and even sound to determine what is falling from the sky—but the best tool may still ...
So if we’re right, each former human is now essentially a radio transmitter and receiver. One plurb sends out a signal that ...
VTOL noise is emerging as the key constraint on urban air mobility, shaping aircraft design, routing, vertiport planning and ...
Music affects us physically. A quick example of this is that our heart beat, respiration and brain waves all entrain, or synchronize, with different rhythms. Slow music tends to slow down our heart ...
Quantum walks sound abstract, but they sit at the center of a very concrete race: who will harness quantum mechanics to solve ...
Lego packs an electronics platform with 3D magnetic tracking, multi-radio communication, and inductive charging into a brick.