Astronomers used cosmic explosions to find that we may be wrong about our own galaxy.
Rather than building ever-larger Coriolis, vortex or ultrasonic sensors, engineers can use smaller measuring paths and combine their outputs to accurately measure flow in large-diameter pipelines.
When checking that solutions to certain problems are correct, it turns out, you can’t get around the inherent complexity of ...
Male pufferfish off the coast of Japan spend days sculpting radial sand formations that stretch roughly two meters across, ...
The Sports Analytics Research Group employs quantitative analysis to give teams the hard numbers they need to perform better ...
Compare deep learning cell segmentation tools Cellpose and StarDist: how each works, how they differ by imaging type, and ...
BOZEMAN— One might not think river raft guiding and highly technical data collection can be complementary parts of a career — except, perhaps, for Eric Sproles, whose work at Montana ...
Intermap Technologies, a global leader in geospatial intelligence powered by proprietary 3D data and AI-driven analytics, today announced the launch of its AI-enabled Orthorectification Service on the ...
Elementary teachers can create authentic contexts for students to practice critical thinking, collaboration, and ...
Device based on two-dimensional oxide interface superconductors can be “edited” using atomic force microscope lithography ...
The Milky Way’s farthest spiral arms have long been sketched more from motion than measurement. Now three violent explosions ...
A team of astronomers has discovered that the spiral arms of the Milky Way galaxy may stretch further out into space than was ...