ScienceAlert on MSN
Scientists Complete Schrödinger's Color Theory Over 100 Years Later
Visual representation of color spaces aligning with a mathematical apex. (LANL) Beauty may lie in the eye of the beholder, ...
Malware is evolving to evade sandboxes by pretending to be a real human behind the keyboard. The Picus Red Report 2026 shows 80% of top attacker techniques now focus on evasion and persistence, ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Scientists complete Schrödinger’s 100-year-old color theory using geometry
A team at Los Alamos National Laboratory has completed a mathematical framework for human color perception that Nobel Prize-winning physicist Erwin Schrodinger first sketched more than a century ago.
Scientists find 60,000-year-old ostrich eggshell carvings follow precise geometric rules, revealing early humans carefully planned designs.
Arousal fluctuates continuously during wakefulness, yet how these moment-to-moment variations shape large-scale functional connectivity (FC) remains unclear. Here, we combined 7T fMRI with concurrent ...
As humans interact with the world each and every day, not a second goes by without the use of one of the five senses. Of these, sight is arguably the most useful. With perception and visuals being ...
Animals are noisy. And their noises can travel a long way. But making sounds can be a double-edged sword: it can help them communicate, sometimes over long distances, but it can also reveal them to ...
Space.com on MSN
Bus-sized asteroid will fly past Earth tonight mere days after being discovered. Here's what to expect
Asteroid 2026 EG1 was discovered on March 8, less than one week ago.
Observations show the universe appears flat, yet its true size and global shape beyond the observable horizon may remain forever unknown.
Space.com on MSN
How fast is the universe actually expanding? Ripples in spacetime could finally solve 'Hubble tension'
Using gravitational waves as a measure of the universe's rate of expansion could solve the biggest headache in physics, the so-called "Hubble tension." ...
If you enjoyed this article, I’d like to ask for your support. Scientific American has served as an advocate for science and industry for 180 years, and right now may be the most critical moment in ...
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