
Printing Lunar Highways From Dust
Lunar regolith, microwaves and concentrated sunlight could let future missions 3D‑print roads and habitats on the moon, avoiding massive launch costs from hauling construction materials.

Lunar regolith, microwaves and concentrated sunlight could let future missions 3D‑print roads and habitats on the moon, avoiding massive launch costs from hauling construction materials.

Once a muted status symbol, the fur coat is being reengineered in high-chroma red tones to boost conspicuity and pedestrian safety in low-light conditions.
2026-05-06

Compounding effort follows a Lotus Effect: in a fixed journey, over 97% of visible progress can cluster in the final stretch, making day‑24 quitting feel rational yet mathematically ruinous.
2026-04-29

Physicists accept travel to the future as routine relativistic physics, but view journeys to the past as solutions of Einstein’s equations that quantum effects likely censor.
2026-04-29

A look at how surf-driven skateboarders exploited basic mechanics, from center of mass shifts to centrifugal force, to generate speed on flat ground.
2026-05-19

Many drivers lose up to 20% fuel in automatics by staying in Drive and pushing harder, instead of using coasting, light throttle and manual mode to trigger built‑in fuel‑cut logic.
2026-04-28

A single desk plant can raise focus by about 15% by easing cognitive load, restoring attention, and tuning stress hormones through subtle visual and sensory cues.
2026-05-18

Basketball’s 10-foot rim began as a rough guess, yet rule inertia, arena design, and cultural identity have locked it in despite taller, stronger athletes.
2026-05-09

Scientists report that regular coffee now ranks behind simple daily movement for slowing biological aging, with light but frequent activity reshaping cellular repair and stress defenses.
2026-05-14

Regular coffee intake tracks with lower risks of type 2 diabetes, Parkinson’s disease and liver cancer, likely through antioxidant, anti-inflammatory and metabolic effects.
2026-05-09

Ocean water is inherently blue because water molecules absorb red wavelengths and let shorter blue wavelengths travel deeper, revealing the intrinsic color of water.
2026-05-18