On March 11, 2011, the Great East Japan Earthquake struck offshore Japan with a magnitude of 9.0. As the most powerful earthquake recorded in Japan, it triggered a tsunami and caused a subsequent meltdown of the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant.
Posts published in “Science”
Flushed cheeks, sweaty palms, increased libido, giddiness, or the need to cuddle up with someone special? Love has always felt like an inexplicable, mysterious force rooted in the heart.
There is perhaps no animal known to humankind to be more precious and cute than Sepia officinalis. a.k.a. Cuttlefish!
With the images of the September California wildfires slowly receding from the news cycle, the consequences of climate change have left the public eye for the time being.
The time is almost here. From the beginning of the pandemic, researchers and pharmaceutical industries have been working tirelessly to create an effective vaccine.
It’s a brisk November day, the sky scattered with wispy cirrus clouds, and it’s a comfortable 10ºC Celsius. A collection of maple trees line Seven Lakes Drive in Bear Mountain State Park in New York, 45 minutes from campus.
Growing up, my mother always reminded me that patience is a virtue.
However, it’s difficult to keep this in mind when the water for your pasta takes forever to boil.
Philip Odonkor, a professor in the School of Systems & Engineering, led a team of four students, Ronald Estevez, Samantha Inneo, John Schneiderhan and Daniel Wadler, to secure top awards at the Smoky Mountains Computational Sciences and Engineering Conference (SMC2020) held virtually in August.
The U.S. Justice Department announced on October 21 that Purdue Pharma, the makers of the opioid medication OxyContin, will plead guilty to multiple criminal charges.
Belief in the supernatural world beyond what we can observe has been a part of human culture for millennia. While many have sought to prove the existence of paranormal entities, there is an alternate explanation that the phenomenon is an internal experience.