Charles Darwin suspected that humans and animals share similar aesthetic tastes. A new citizen science experiment supports ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
US: Newton’s third law of motion broken by new time crystal built using sound waves
Physicists at New York University in the US have built a new kind of ...
Scientists have created a new kind of time crystal using sound waves to levitate tiny beads in mid-air. These particles ...
New research by Smithsonian scientists suggests that preferences for certain sounds might be evolutionarily conserved ...
Discover Magazine on MSN
Antarctica’s mysterious radio pulses remain unexplained — but better particle experiments could change that
Learn how, after one of the world’s most sensitive neutrino detectors discovered mysterious radio pulses in Antarctica, ...
Hearing music about climate change "is more powerful than just looking at a graph or reading an article about ice melting," ...
A new study from the University of Texas at Austin suggests humans and animals often prefer the same sounds. By using an ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Sound waves may let researchers remotely tune material stiffness on demand
A team co-led by UC San Diego and the University of Michigan reports that short pulses of sound could remotely drag a structural defect through a metamaterial lattice, potentially letting researchers ...
Researchers at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution have uncovered the oldest known recording of whale song. And it reveals a noisier soundscape of today's oceans.
Charles Darwin theorized that a sound, smell or color that's attractive to one species can be preferred by others too. A new study finds humans and animals do share preferences for certain sounds.
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