Physics
- 			 Physics PhysicsSeparating science fact from fiction in Netflix’s ‘3 Body Problem’Real science underpins much of the action in the show — along with a hefty dose of artistic liberty. 
- 			 Physics PhysicsPhysicists take a major step toward making a nuclear clockBy tweaking the energy of a thorium nucleus with a laser, scientists demonstrated a key step to building clocks based on the physics of atomic nuclei. 
- 			 Life LifeDuring a total solar eclipse, some colors really pop. Here’s whyAs a solar eclipse approaches totality and our eyes adjust to dimming light, our color vision changes. It’s called the Purkinje effect. 
- 			 Physics PhysicsA teeny device can measure subtle shifts in Earth’s gravitational fieldNo bigger than a grain of rice, the heart of the instrument is the latest entrant in the quest to build ever tinier gravity-measuring devices. By Adam Mann
- 			 Psychology PsychologyTimbre can affect what harmony is music to our earsThe acoustic qualities of instruments may have influenced variations in musical scales and preferred harmonies. 
- 			 Physics Physics50 years ago, superconductors were warming upSuperconducting temperatures have risen by about 250 degrees since the 1970s, but are still too cold to enable practical technologies. 
- 			 Particle Physics Particle PhysicsForests might serve as enormous neutrino detectorsTrees could act as antennas that pick up radio waves of ultra-high energy neutrinos interactions, one physicist proposes. 
- 			 Physics Physics‘Countdown’ takes stock of the U.S. nuclear weapons stockpilePhysicists grapple with their role as stewards of the United States’ aging nuclear weapons in the new book by Sarah Scoles. 
- 			 Physics PhysicsPhysicist Sekazi Mtingwa considers himself an apostle of scienceAfter big contributions in accelerator physics, Sekazi Mtingwa has been focused on opening science for everyone. By Elise Cutts
- 			 Physics PhysicsHere’s how scientists reached nuclear fusion ‘ignition’ for the first timeThe first fusion experiment to produce an energy excess required meticulous planning and also revealed a long-predicted heating phenomenon. 
- 			 Plants PlantsHere’s why blueberries are blueNanostructures in a blueberry’s waxy coating make it look blue, despite having dark red pigments — and no blue ones — in its skin, a new study reports. 
- 			 Tech Tech‘Nuts and Bolts’ showcases the 7 building blocks of modern engineeringScience News reviews Roma Agrawal's book, which updates the classic list of simple machines and reveals the heart and soul of engineering. By Anna Demming