Résultats de Recherche
Voir tous les résulats
Nous rejoindre
Nous rejoindre
Se connecter
S’enregistrer
Sélecteur de thème
Mode nuit
Language
English
Arabic
French
Spanish
Portuguese
Deutsch
Turkish
Dutch
Italiano
Russian
Romaian
Portuguese (Brazil)
Greek
Blogs
Découvrir Blogs
Marketplace
Découvrir Marketplace
Groupes
Découvrir Groupes
Mes groupes
Pages
Découvrir Pages
Aimer les pages
Suite de l'agenda
Articles populaires
Découvrir les articles
Marketplace
Blogs
Pages
Groupes
Tout voir
Mise à niveau vers Pro
Mise à niveau
Scientific American
@ScientificAmerican
J'aime
Partager
Chronologie
Photos
Vidéos
Aperçu
Environ
Awesome discoveries. Expert insights. Science that shapes the world.
1 Les gens qui ont lié ça
103 Articles
2 Photos
0 Vidéos
0 Aperçu
Science &Technology
Photos
Vue
0
Nouveau post
Scientific American
partage un lien
2024-09-18 23:03:06
·
WWW.SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COM
Why Are There Fewer Spotted Lanternflies in New York City?
Invasive spotted lanternflies are spreading across the metro areas of New York City, Philadelphia and Washington, D.C., despite professional and amateur attempts to reduce their numbers
·
8 Vue
Scientific American
partage un lien
2024-09-18 23:00:19
·
WWW.SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COM
Surgeons IdentifyAnd SaveA Patients Chess-Playing Brain Area
Neuroscientists at the University of Barcelona set about on a search for brain areas involved in chess-related tasks so that surgeons could avoid them when removing a tumor
·
10 Vue
Scientific American
partage un lien
2024-09-18 17:58:21
·
WWW.SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COM
How Your Brain Tells Speech and Music Apart
Simple cues help people to distinguish song from the spoken word
·
14 Vue
Scientific American
partage un lien
2024-09-18 16:04:37
·
WWW.SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COM
Science Crossword: Cosmic Goals
Play this crossword inspired by the October 2024 issue of Scientific American
·
10 Vue
Scientific American
partage un lien
2024-09-18 01:05:55
·
WWW.SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COM
Going Back to the Moon, Researching Chickadee Hybrids and Understanding Addiction
This months issue covers the reasons its so hard to go back to the moon, the science of empathy and new advances in treating sickle cell disease
·
16 Vue
Scientific American
partage un lien
2024-09-17 22:27:49
·
WWW.SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COM
Record-Breaking Rainfall in Carolinas and Europe Explained
On opposite sides of the Atlantic Ocean, Central Europe and North Carolina have both been drenched by torrential rains
·
10 Vue
Scientific American
partage un lien
2024-09-17 20:18:34
·
WWW.SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COM
The Next President Should End NASAs Space Launch System Rocket
Rather than building an obsolescent, obscenely-over-budget jumbo rocket, NASA should turn to building truly innovative space technologies and plan a realistic lunar landing program
·
14 Vue
Scientific American
partage un lien
2024-09-17 15:41:07
·
WWW.SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COM
New Sickle Cell Treatments Highlight the Power of Patient Perspectives
Illuminating the experience of people living with sickle cell could improve patients lives and enhance all of medicine
·
16 Vue
Scientific American
partage un lien
2024-09-17 11:52:14
·
WWW.SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COM
The Brain Really Does Choke Under Pressure
Study links choking under pressure to the brain region that controls movement
·
21 Vue
Scientific American
partage un lien
2024-09-17 01:04:06
·
WWW.SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COM
How to Understand Your Childs Screenings for Autism and Other Conditions
The predictive value of childhood screenings for autism and other conditions depends on how common the condition is, a limit that parents need to understand
·
21 Vue
Scientific American
partage un lien
2024-09-16 11:37:23
·
WWW.SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COM
AI Could Help Save Us from Conspiracy Theories, and Massachusetts Could Help Save Us from Our Trash
AI fights conspiracy theories, Massachusetts leads the way on waste reduction, and more in this weeks science news roundup
·
21 Vue
Scientific American
partage un lien
2024-09-16 01:07:29
·
WWW.SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COM
The Earliest Known Animal Sex Chromosome is 480 Million Years Old
The octopus sex chromosome appears to have been maintained over hundreds of millions of years, making it the most ancient of such chromosomes in animals
·
22 Vue
Scientific American
partage un lien
2024-09-16 01:07:29
·
WWW.SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COM
Kids Are Headed Back to School. Are They Breathing Clean Air?
Clean indoor air protects against diseases such as COVID and flu, but were not doing enough to ensure it
·
20 Vue
Scientific American
partage un lien
2024-09-16 01:07:28
·
WWW.SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COM
AI Surveillance Pricing Practices Under Federal Probe
The Federal Trade Commission is studying how companies use consumer data to charge different prices for the same product
·
22 Vue
Scientific American
partage un lien
2024-09-16 01:07:27
·
WWW.SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COM
How Racism Could Be Speeding Up Aging and Early Menopause
Understanding how racism affects aging and the timing of menopause could lead to better screening and preventive care.
·
20 Vue
Scientific American
partage un lien
2024-09-16 01:07:27
·
WWW.SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COM
Cutbacks to U.S. Antarctic Science Risk Geopolitical Shifts at the South Pole
Reductions to American research at the South Pole could affect the politics of the southernmost continent
·
20 Vue
Scientific American
partage un lien
2024-09-16 01:07:26
·
WWW.SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COM
The Olympics Breaking Fiasco Undermined Serious Hip-Hop Artists and Scholars
The Raygun Olympics fiasco points to how hip-hop scholarship is at risk of being colonized and undermined in academia
·
22 Vue
Scientific American
partage un lien
2024-09-16 01:07:25
·
WWW.SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COM
Why Do Cats Hate Water?
Not all cats are hydrophobic
·
20 Vue
Scientific American
partage un lien
2024-09-15 14:26:51
·
WWW.SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COM
Black Hole Detectors Fulfill Moores Law
A famous prediction that microchips improve exponentially over time can be applicable in unrelated developments, such as the technology used to discover colliding black holes
·
28 Vue
Scientific American
partage un lien
2024-09-15 14:26:51
·
WWW.SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COM
The Search for Dark Matter Just Got a Lot Harder
Dark matter may be lighter in mass than once hoped
·
28 Vue
Scientific American
partage un lien
2024-09-15 14:16:37
·
WWW.SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COM
How Testosterone Changes the Immune System in Trans Men
A small study of transgender men taking testosterone revealed changes in immune pathways involved in responding to viruses and inflammation
·
24 Vue
Scientific American
partage un lien
2024-09-15 14:16:37
·
WWW.SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COM
School Phone Bans Are Extremely Popular. Heres What the Evidence Says
As a result of phone bans, millions of students will stuff their phones into fabric pouches this fall
·
23 Vue
Scientific American
partage un lien
2024-09-15 14:16:36
·
WWW.SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COM
The U.S. Should Teach Kids to Think Logically
Training in symbolic logic is critical in many careers, for responsible citizenship and better lives. It is also an underexploited antidote to todays bizarre conspiracy thinking
·
22 Vue
Scientific American
partage un lien
2024-09-15 14:16:36
·
WWW.SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COM
Learn How Astronauts Take Photos from NASA Flight Engineer Matthew Dominick
NASA astronaut Matthew Dominick speaks with Science Quickly host Rachel Feltman about how he captures jaw-dropping images from space
·
22 Vue
Scientific American
partage un lien
2024-09-15 01:05:43
·
WWW.SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COM
How to Balance Caregiving for Loved Ones with Personal Well-Being
Caring for aging loved ones brings its own set of emotional and physical hurdles. Experts offer guidance on finding support.
·
23 Vue
Scientific American
partage un lien
2024-09-14 21:43:01
·
WWW.SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COM
We Must Secure Our Future in a Hotter, More Dangerous World
Defending the U.S. is much more complicated in an era of climate change
·
23 Vue
Scientific American
partage un lien
2024-09-14 21:43:01
·
WWW.SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COM
We Must Secure Our Future in a Hotter, More Dangerous World
Defending the U.S. is much more complicated in an era of climate change
·
22 Vue
Scientific American
partage un lien
2024-09-14 13:52:47
·
WWW.SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COM
The Worlds First Nuclear Clock Could Unlock the Universes Dark Secrets
After decades of work, physicists have finally broken into the atom to build the first nuclear clock
·
97 Vue
Scientific American
partage un lien
2024-09-14 13:52:46
·
WWW.SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COM
Why This Great Mathematician Wanted a Heptadecagon on His Tombstone
Mathematician Gauss left behind a trophy case of mathematical achievements to highlight on his tombstone, but above all he wanted a regular heptadecagon etched on it
·
96 Vue
Scientific American
partage un lien
2024-09-14 01:05:29
·
WWW.SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COM
A Huge Tsunami Caused by a Thinning Glacier Created a Seismic Event for Nine Days
Scientists have traced a baffling monotonous planetary hum that lasted for nine days back to a glacier in Greenland
·
30 Vue
Plus de lecture