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An Egyptian fruit bat extends its wings in flight.

Nachum Ulanovsky

Latest Articles

How Animals Build a Sense of Direction

Researchers recorded the neurons that shape directional navigation as bats explored a remote island off the coast of Tanzania.

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Two Twisty Shapes Resolve a Centuries-Old Topology Puzzle

The Bonnet problem asks when just a bit of information is enough to uniquely identify a whole surface.

Why There’s No Single Best Way To Store Information

The math of data structures helps us understand how different storage systems come with different trade-offs between resources such as time and memory.

String Theory Can Now Describe a Universe That Has Dark Energy

In an unprecedented step, researchers crafted a detailed model compatible with the universe’s accelerated expansion.

Cells Use ‘Bioelectricity’ To Coordinate and Make Group Decisions

The discovery that tissues use electricity to expel unhealthy cells is part of a surge of renewed interest in the currents flowing through our bodies.

Distinct AI Models Seem To Converge On How They Encode Reality

Is the inside of a vision model at all like a language model? Researchers argue that as the models grow more powerful, they may be converging toward a singular “Platonic” way to represent the world.

In Quantum Mechanics, Nothingness Is the Potential To Be Anything

Try as they might, scientists can’t truly rid a space or an object of its energy. But what “zero-point energy” really means is up for interpretation.

How Dad’s Fitness May Be Packaged and Passed Down in Sperm RNA

Research into how a father’s choices — such as diet, exercise, stress, nicotine use — may transfer traits to his children has become impossible to ignore.

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The Biggest Breakthroughs in Mathematics: 2025

Emily Buder/Quanta Magazine; Carlos Arrojo for Quanta Magazine

Special Features

The Joy of Why


Two cranes symmetrically poised with their beaks together below a full moon
00:00 / 46:07

Richard Prum explains why he thinks feathers and vibrant traits in birds evolved not solely for survival, but also through aesthetic choice.

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The Quantum Mechanics of Greenhouse Gases

Earth’s radiation can send some molecules spinning or vibrating, which is what makes them greenhouse gases. This infographic explains how relatively few heat-trapping molecules can have a planetary effect.

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Illuminating basic science and math research through public service journalism.

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