Wireless electricity? It’s here
Katie Hall was shocked the second she saw it: a light-bulb glowing in the middle of a room with no wires attached.
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Katie Hall was shocked the second she saw it: a light-bulb glowing in the middle of a room with no wires attached.
The Ministry of Education in China has published a list of over 10,000 authorised foreign educational institutions in a bid to make students more aware of unauthorised overseas universities, as a survey shows wealthy Chinese parents are continuing to invest in overseas education.
A pair of reports on climate change crossed my desktop last week that were simply too noteworthy to ignore.
For those fortunate enough to receive tenure-track job offers, negotiating a better deal can be as stressful as earlier stages in the job hunt.
From forests in Queens to wetlands in China, planners and scientists are promoting a new approach that incorporates experiments ...
The last edge of the Greenland ice sheet that had resisted global warming has now become unstable, adding billions of tonnes of meltwater to rising seas, scientists say.
First it was pedal power; now Londoners are being offered electric transport to dodge their way around the city.
Every day brings new details and new questions surrounding the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, a Boeing 777 with 239 people aboard that went missing on March 8 en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing.
The planet Mercury is about 7km smaller today than when its crust first solidified over four billion years ago.
Mental health problems are on the rise among UK academics amid the pressures of greater job insecurity, constant demand for results and an increasingly marketised higher education system