
Watch robot crab 'Wavy Dave' get attacked in claw-waving contest with real crabs
Researchers have built a robot crab that can compete in claw-waving displays with real fiddler crabs, but "Wavy Dave" doesn't always come out unscathed.


By Patrick Pester published
Krasheninnikov volcano has erupted on Russia's Kamchatka Peninsula. This is the second volcano to erupt in the region following the magnitude 8.8 megaquake on July 30.

By Harry Baker published
A surprising new paper suggests that the universe's expected lifespan is just 33 billion years, and that the cosmos will start dying in less than a third of that time. However, this is only one possible theory.

Discover the research changing our understanding of the world

Extraordinary images of our sublime universe

Science questions, answered

Test your knowledge on all things science with our weekly, free crossword puzzle!

Test your knowledge of everything from space to nature

A look at the weird and wonderful species that live on our planet

Unusual case reports from the medical literature

A window onto extraordinary landscapes on Earth

Medical conditions you may never have heard of before

A glimpse into how people lived in the past

Incredible images of our planet from above

Our roundup the biggest discoveries and top science in the news each week

By Isha Ishtiaq published
A popular zero-calorie sweetener could injure cells in the brain's blood vessels, a lab study finds. Here's what we know so far.

By Lydia Smith published
Aye-ayes are remarkable thanks to their extra-long, bony middle fingers, which they use to locate grubs and pick their noses.

By Sara Hashemi published
Frogs can breathe and drink through their thin skin — but how does that work?

By Patrick Pester published
Scientists have filmed odd communities of life flourishing deeper in the ocean than ever before. The chemosynthesis-based life-forms get their energy from chemical reactions, powered by gases seeping out of faults on the seafloor.

By Harry Baker last updated
Test your knowledge on all things science with our weekly, free crossword puzzle!

By Ben Turner published
A new model may have finally solved where storm clouds get their missing energy.

By Victoria Atkinson published
Other metals might be worth their weight in gold, but can they be turned into it?

By Damien Pine published
When two fluids don't mix well, they sometimes form strange patterns called "viscous fingering," or Saffman-Taylor instability. Studying these patterns can help scientists understand how to design systems for carbon storage, a key part of managing climate change.

By Kimberley Lane last updated
These are the best wildlife lenses you can buy in 2025

By Ben Turner published
Google's earthquake early-warning system has used phone accelerometers on Android devices to increase quake alerts by tenfold across 98 countries.
Please login or signup to comment
Please wait...