sumi.news
  • Search
  • Following
  • Sign in
← Back to news
Scientific American
S

Scientific American RSS Feed

  • www.scientificamerican.com
  • rss.sciam.com/ScientificAmerican-Global

  • Latest
  • Sun Feb 1

First solar eclipse of 2026 blazes a ‘ring of fire’ above Antarctica

2w
Scientific AmericanS

Why privatizing public land won’t solve the housing crisis

2w
Scientific AmericanS

What are JWST’s Little Red Dots? Astronomers may finally have an answer

2w
Scientific AmericanS

This mathematician proved the random walk theorem to clear his name as a lurker

2w
Scientific AmericanS

The ghost in the machine

2w
Scientific AmericanS

Strange special relativity effect observed for the first time

2w
Scientific AmericanS

Science crossword: What’s inside?

2w
Scientific AmericanS

Readers respond to the November 2025 issue

2w
Scientific AmericanS

Polyamory isn’t all about sex

2w
Scientific AmericanS

Poem: ‘Boulders at Hickory Run’

2w
Scientific AmericanS

Photographer finds thousands of Triassic dinosaur prints on sheer mountain cliffs

2w
Scientific AmericanS

Moving to a walkable city can add 1,100 steps to your day

2w
Scientific AmericanS

Math puzzle: The sum of all circles

2w
Scientific AmericanS

March 2026: Science history from 50, 100 and 150 years ago

2w
Scientific AmericanS

How one chemist is using AI and robots to automate lab experiments

2w
Scientific AmericanS

How artist Stephanie Dinkins is trying to fix AI bias

2w
Scientific AmericanS

How Stanford doctors use AI scribes to cut paperwork and focus on patients

2w
Scientific AmericanS

How AI helps this civil rights lawyer beat the Feds

2w
Scientific AmericanS

How AI copilots became everyday infrastructure

2w
Scientific AmericanS

Deepfakes are getting faster than fact-checks, says digital forensics expert Hany Farid

2w
Scientific AmericanS

Dealing with stress-caused sickness in family caregivers

2w
Scientific AmericanS

AI Is entering health care, and nurses are being asked to trust it

2w
Scientific AmericanS

A veteran teacher explains how to use AI in the classroom the right way

2w
Scientific AmericanS

The mathematical mystery inside the legendary ’90s shooter Quake 3

2w
Scientific AmericanS

Astronomers spot one of the largest spinning structures in the universe

2w
Scientific AmericanS

Happy Lunar New Year! Celebrate the Year of the Horse with science

2w
Scientific AmericanS

Trump rejects climate science, winter goes haywire, and ‘Penisgate’ rumors arise at the Olympics

2w
Scientific AmericanS

Spaceflight literally moves your brain

2w
Scientific AmericanS

First Proof is AI’s toughest math test yet. The results are mixed

2w
Scientific AmericanS

How often do people fall passionately in love? The answer may be less than you think

2w
Scientific AmericanS

Axolotls can regenerate their thymus, a complex immune system organ

2w
Scientific AmericanS

How roses evolved to become the flower of Valentine’s Day

2w
Scientific AmericanS

8 romance novels for readers who love science, too

2w
Scientific AmericanS

Let these nine romantic animals inspire you on Valentine’s Day

2w
Scientific AmericanS

Following one of these five diets may be the key to living longer

2w
Scientific AmericanS

Why an Army antidrone laser grounded flights at El Paso International Airport

2w
Scientific AmericanS

How a year of RFK, Jr., has changed American science

2w
Scientific AmericanS

How much energy is released when supermassive black holes collide?

2w
Scientific AmericanS

AI tool decreased political polarization from social media algorithms

2w
Scientific AmericanS

NASA launches Crew-12 astronauts in Valentine’s Day gift to the ISS

2w
Scientific AmericanS

How to name a Madagascar hissing cockroach for Valentine’s Day at the Bronx Zoo

2w
Scientific AmericanS

The story of the first kiss—21.5 million years ago

2w
Scientific AmericanS

Join the Great Backyard Bird Count—for science!

2w
Scientific AmericanS

AI uncovers solutions to Erdős problems, moving closer to transforming math

2w
Scientific AmericanS

How often does the average person fart? Scientists built a device to find out

2w
Scientific AmericanS

What repealing the ‘endangerment finding’ means for public health

2w
Scientific AmericanS

‘Inside-out’ planetary system perplexes astronomers

2w
Scientific AmericanS

Elephants' peculiar whiskers help them sense the world around them

2w
Scientific AmericanS

Did astronomers just see a star blink out to become a black hole?

2w
Scientific AmericanS

Katharine Burr Blodgett’s brilliance had to fit into the role of the only woman in a lab filled with men—it was the air she breathed

2w
Scientific AmericanS
More →

Entries updated Mar 3, 2026 12:39:54 PM PST

Questions? Suggestions? alex@sumi.news