
Ben Turner
Ben Turner is a U.K. based staff writer at Live Science. He covers physics and astronomy, among other topics like tech and climate change. He graduated from University College London with a degree in particle physics before training as a journalist. When he's not writing, Ben enjoys reading literature, playing the guitar and embarrassing himself with chess.
Latest articles by Ben Turner

Heaviest antimatter particle ever discovered could hold secrets to our universe's origins
By Ben Turner published
The newly found antiparticle, called antihyperhydrogen-4, could have a potential imbalance with its matter counterpart that may help scientists understand how our universe came to be.

AI can predict 'tipping points' for future disasters like pandemics or ecological collapse, scientists say
By Ben Turner published
Predicting dangerous tipping points in complex systems has proven to be a headache for scientists. Now, a new AI system could be poised to do the job for them.

Physicists find superconductor behavior at temperatures once thought 'impossible'
By Ben Turner published
Scientists have observed an unexpected new behavior in a superconducting material. If physicists can figure out the cause, it could help them to find room-temperature superconductors.

Catastrophic collision between Milky Way and Andromeda galaxies may not happen after all, new study hints
By Ben Turner published
Astronomers have long predicted that a collision between our galaxy and nearby Andromeda could be inevitable, but new calculations suggest this may be an over exaggeration.

ChatGPT is truly awful at diagnosing medical conditions
By Ben Turner published
The large language model gets medical calls wrong more often than not.

NASA delays Boeing Starliner return flight again amid 'major discussion' about astronaut safety
By Ben Turner published
NASA has once again pushed back the deadline for when the troubled Boeing Starliner spacecraft must leave the International Space Station. The agency expects to be ready to conduct a flight readiness review as soon as the end of next week.

Perseid meteor shower rains 'shooting stars' over Stonehenge in glorious astrophotography image
By Brandon Specktor published
A UK-based astrophotographer captured this stunning composite image of the Perseid meteor shower raining "shooting stars" over Stonehenge.

Enormous hidden ocean discovered under Mars could contain life
By Ben Turner published
Scientists examining data from NASA's InSight Lander have revealed the likely presence of an underground reservoir containing enough liquid to cover the planet with a mile of water.

Barrage of solar explosions could bring auroras to the U.S. this weekend as Perseid meteor shower peaks
By Ben Turner published
Three powerful solar eruptions could bring auroras as far south as New York and Idaho right at the peak of the Perseid meteor shower this weekend.

AI models trained on 'synthetic data' could break down and regurgitate unintelligible nonsense, scientists warn
By Ben Turner published
If left unchecked,"model collapse" could make AI systems less useful, and fill the internet with incomprehensible babble.

NASA may send Starliner home without its crew — leaving astronauts stuck in space until 2025
By Ben Turner last updated
The Crew-9 handover has been delayed amid rumors that NASA could be planning to return the troubled Starliner spacecraft without its astronauts.

James Webb telescope confirms the earliest galaxy in the universe is bursting with way more stars than we thought possible
By Ben Turner published
The light from the most distant galaxy in the known universe suggests that there's something off about our current cosmological models, a new James Webb Space Telescope study finds. The explanations remain elusive.

Once-in-a-lifetime nova explosion from T Coronae Borealis will create a 'new star' in the sky
By Ben Turner published
The T Coronae Borealis nova will soon burst into life above our heads for the first time in 78 years.

NASA Mars rover finds 'first compelling detection' of potential fossilized life on the Red Planet
By Ben Turner published
A peculiar leopard-spotted rock, found beside an ancient, dried-out river in Mars' Jezero crater, contains some tantalizing clues of ancient life, NASA said.

Never-before-seen shapes up to 1,300 feet long discovered beneath Antarctic ice
By Ben Turner published
The unusual patterns, found beneath West Antarctica's Doston Ice Shelf, could help scientists to better understand how glaciers erode.

'Absurdly fast' algorithm solves 70-year-old logjam — speeding up network traffic in areas from airline scheduling to the internet
By Ben Turner published
Researchers have devised an "absurdly fast" algorithm to solve the problem of finding the fastest flow through a network.

China's Chang'e 5 rover detects hints of water on the moon
By Ben Turner published
The hydrated molecules were found inside a rock sample retrieved by China's Chang'e 5 mission in 2020

'A remarkable conspiracy': Why is matter neutral? Physicist Frank Close explores the mystery in a new book
By Ben Turner published
Frank Close tells us about the history of particle physics, and what it means that charge in our universe's matter is so closely balanced.

Ultra-rare black hole found hiding in the center of the Milky Way
By Ben Turner published
A potential intermediate-mass black hole is hiding right next to our galaxy's supermassive black hole.

Boeing Starliner astronauts remain stuck on International Space Station with no set return date, NASA announces
By Ben Turner published
After nearly two months of postponement, Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams are still on board the ISS. But NASA and Boeing say they still plan to return the two aboard Starliner.

Scientists create weird 'time crystal' from atoms inflated to be hundreds of times bigger than normal
By Ben Turner published
By blowing atoms up to several hundred times their size, researchers have been able to make another type of oddly-behaving time crystal.

Google Doodle honors César Lattes, Brazilian physicist who discovered a long-sought particle hidden in cosmic rays
By Ben Turner published
The physicist César Lattes, who is honored today (July 11) in a Google Doodle, is famous across Latin America for his discovery of the pion — a subatomic particle produced by shockwaves from exploding stars.

Time might be a mirage created by quantum physics, study suggests
By Ben Turner published
Physicists have struggled to understand the nature of time since the field began. But a new theoretical study suggests time could be an illusion woven at the quantum level.
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