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The Conversation

Let’s go on an ESCAPADE – NASA’s small, low-cost orbiters will examine Mars’ atmosphere

  • Written by Christopher Carr, Assistant Professor of Aerospace Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology
imageThis close-up illustration shows what one of the twin ESCAPADE spacecraft will look like conducting its science operations.James Rattray/Rocket Lab USA/Goddard Space Flight Center

Envision a time when hundreds of spacecraft are exploring the solar system and beyond. That’s the future that NASA’s ESCAPADE, or escape and plasma...

Read more: Let’s go on an ESCAPADE – NASA’s small, low-cost orbiters will examine Mars’ atmosphere

‘Simulation theory’ brings an AI twist out of ‘The Matrix’ to ideas mystics and religious scholars have voiced for centuries

  • Written by Rizwan Virk, Faculty Associate, PhD Candidate in Human and Social Dimensions of Science and Technology, Arizona State University
imageComputer code appears during an immersive reality screening of the 1999 movie 'The Matrix,' held in Inglewood, Calif., on May 28, 2025. Patrick T. Fallon/AFP via Getty Images

In the most talked-about film from the final year of the 20th century, “The Matrix,” a computer hacker named Neo finds that the world he lives and works in...

Read more: ‘Simulation theory’ brings an AI twist out of ‘The Matrix’ to ideas mystics and religious scholars...

Why rural Maine may back Democrat Graham Platner’s populism in the Senate campaign − but not his party

  • Written by Nicholas Jacobs, Goldfarb Family Distinguished Chair in American Government, Colby College; Institute for Humane Studies
imageGraham Platner, left, Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate, chats with his neighbor, Denis Nault, on Nov. 3, 2025, in Sullivan, Maine. AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty

Every few years, Democrats try to convince themselves they’ve found the one – a candidate who can finally speak fluent rural, who looks and sounds like the voters they’ve...

Read more: Why rural Maine may back Democrat Graham Platner’s populism in the Senate campaign − but not his...

NASA goes on an ESCAPADE – twin small, low-cost orbiters will examine Mars’ atmosphere

  • Written by Christopher Carr, Assistant Professor of Aerospace Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology
imageThis close-up illustration shows what one of the twin ESCAPADE spacecraft will look like conducting its science operations.James Rattray/Rocket Lab USA/Goddard Space Flight Center

Envision a time when hundreds of spacecraft are exploring the solar system and beyond. That’s the future that NASA’s ESCAPADE, or Escape and Plasma...

Read more: NASA goes on an ESCAPADE – twin small, low-cost orbiters will examine Mars’ atmosphere

The rise of the autistic detective – why neurodivergent minds are at the heart of modern mysteries

  • Written by Soohyun Cho, Assistant Professor at the Center for Integrative Studies in the Arts & Humanities, Michigan State University

There never seems to be a shortage of good crime shows on TV, and network television is teeming with detectives who think – and act – differently.

This fall, new seasons of “Elsbeth,” “High Potential,” “Patience” and “Watson” have aired, and they all feature leads who share similar...

Read more: The rise of the autistic detective – why neurodivergent minds are at the heart of modern mysteries

The shutdown has ended – but this economist isn’t rejoicing quite yet

  • Written by Amitrajeet A. Batabyal, Distinguished Professor, Arthur J. Gosnell Professor of Economics, & Head, Department of Sustainability, Rochester Institute of Technology

After 43 days, the U.S. government shutdown finally came to an end late on Nov. 12, 2025, when Congress voted through a long-overdue funding bill, which President Donald Trump promptly signed.

But the prolonged gap in government-as-usual has come at a cost to the economy.

The Conversation spoke with RIT economist Amitrajeet A. Batabyal on the short-...

Read more: The shutdown has ended – but this economist isn’t rejoicing quite yet

What is Fusarium graminearum, the fungus a Chinese scientist pleaded guilty to smuggling into the US?

  • Written by Tom W. Allen, Associate Research Professor of Plant Pathology, Mississippi State University
imageWheat infected by *_Fusarium_*, a toxic fungus, has kernels that appear white with orange at the base.Klaus-Dietmar Gabbert/picture alliance via Getty Images

A Chinese plant scientist at the University of Michigan who drew national attention in June 2025 when she was arrested and accused along with another Chinese scientist of smuggling a...

Read more: What is Fusarium graminearum, the fungus a Chinese scientist pleaded guilty to smuggling into the...

No time to recover: Hurricane Melissa and the Caribbean’s compounding disaster trap as the storms keep coming

  • Written by Farah Nibbs, Assistant Professor of Emergency and Disaster Health Systems, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
imageHurricane Melissa tore off roofs and stripped trees of their leaves, including in many parts of Jamaica hit by Hurricane Beryl a year earlier.Ricardo Makyn/AFP via Getty Images

Headlines have been filled with talk of the catastrophic power of Hurricane Melissa after the Category 5 storm devastated communities across Jamaica, Cuba and Haiti in...

Read more: No time to recover: Hurricane Melissa and the Caribbean’s compounding disaster trap as the storms...

New technologies like AI come with big claims – borrowing the scientific concept of validity can help cut through the hype

  • Written by Kai R. Larsen, Professor of Information Systems, University of Colorado Boulder
imageClosely examining the claims companies make about a product can help you separate hype from reality.Flavio Coelho/Moment via Getty Images

Technological innovations can seem relentless. In computing, some have proclaimed that “a year in machine learning is a century in any other field.” But how do you know whether those advancements are...

Read more: New technologies like AI come with big claims – borrowing the scientific concept of validity can...

What is time? Rather than something that ‘flows,’ a philosopher suggests time is a psychological projection

  • Written by Adrian Bardon, Professor of Philosophy, Wake Forest University
imageTime isn't an illusion, unlike optical illusions that trick your eyes. There's nothing to 'trick' because it has no physical basis.BSIP/UIG Via Getty Image

“Time flies,” “time waits for no one,” “as time goes on”: The way we speak about time tends to strongly imply that the passage of time is some sort of real...

Read more: What is time? Rather than something that ‘flows,’ a philosopher suggests time is a psychological...

More Articles ...

  1. Turn shopping stress into purposeful gift giving by cultivating ‘consumer wisdom’ during the holidays
  2. Community health centers provide care for 1 in 10 Americans, but funding cuts threaten their survival
  3. Bad Bunny is the latest product of political rage — how pop culture became the front line of American politics
  4. Sulfur-based batteries could offer electric vehicles a greener, longer-range option
  5. Want to make America healthy again? Stop fueling climate change
  6. Colorado’s rural schools serve more than 130,000 students, and their superintendents want more pay for their teachers
  7. Students of color are at greater risk for reading difficulties – even in kindergarten
  8. Under Ron DeSantis’ leadership, Florida leads the nation in executions in 2025
  9. The UN is reinventing peacekeeping – Haiti is the testing ground
  10. Star-shaped cells make a molecule that can ‘rewire’ the brains of mice with Down syndrome – understanding how could lead to new treatments
  11. Electric fields steered nanoparticles through a liquid-filled maze – this new method could improve drug delivery and purification systems
  12. Blame the shutdown on citizens who prefer politicians to vanquish their opponents rather than to work for the common good
  13. A bold new investment fund aims to channel billions into tropical forest protection – one key change can make it better
  14. Canada loses its official ‘measles-free’ status – and the US will follow soon, as vaccination rates fall
  15. What America’s divided and tumultuous politics of the late-19th century can teach us
  16. The ‘supercenter’ effect: How massive, one-stop retailers fuel overconsumption − and waste
  17. What does ‘pro-life’ mean? There’s no one answer – even for advocacy groups that oppose abortion
  18. Why do people have baby teeth and adult teeth?
  19. Turning motion into medicine: How AI, motion capture and wearables can improve your health
  20. Allen Iverson’s 2001 Sixers embodied Philly’s brash, gritty soul − and changed basketball culture forever
  21. What AI earbuds can’t replace: The value of learning another language
  22. Trump was already cutting low-income energy assistance – the shutdown is making things worse as cold weather arrives
  23. James Watson exemplified the best and worst of science – from monumental discoveries to sexism and cutthroat competition
  24. What to know as hundreds of flights are grounded across the US – an air travel expert explains
  25. National 211 hotline calls for food assistance quadrupled in a matter of days, a magnitude typically seen during disasters
  26. Seashells from centuries ago show that seagrass meadows on Florida’s Nature Coast are thriving
  27. Pennsylvania counties face tough choices on spending $2B opioid settlement funds
  28. FDA recall of blood pressure pills due to cancer-causing contaminant may point to higher safety risks in older generic drugs
  29. Always watching: How ICE’s plan to monitor social media 24/7 threatens privacy and civic participation
  30. House speaker’s refusal to seat Arizona representative is supported by history and law
  31. Overwhelm the public with muzzle-velocity headlines: A strategy rooted in racism and authoritarianism
  32. Who gets SNAP benefits to buy groceries and what the government pays for the program – in 5 charts
  33. AI could worsen inequalities in schools – teachers are key to whether it will
  34. Anxiety over school admissions isn’t limited to college – parents of young children are also feeling pressure, some more acutely than others
  35. Supreme Court soon to hear a religious freedom case that’s united both sides of the church-state divide
  36. Chatbots don’t judge! Customers prefer robots over humans when it comes to those ’um, you know’ purchases
  37. Brewery waste can be repurposed to make nanoparticles that can fight bacteria
  38. The unraveling of workplace protections for delivery drivers: A tale of 2 workplace models
  39. Why does your doctor seem so rushed and dismissive? That bedside manner may be the result of the health care system
  40. How to keep dementia from robbing your loved ones of their sense of personhood – tips for caregivers
  41. Trump’s White House renovations fulfill Obama’s prediction, kind of
  42. A brief history of congressional oversight, from Revolutionary War financing to Pam Bondi
  43. How the US cut climate-changing emissions while its economy more than doubled
  44. Why people don’t demand data privacy – even as governments and corporations collect more personal information
  45. HIV knows no borders, and the Trump administration’s new strategy leave Americans vulnerable – an HIV-prevention expert explains
  46. Customers can become more loyal if their banks solve fraud cases, researchers find
  47. The beauty backfire effect: Being too attractive can hurt fitness influencers, new research shows
  48. Bad Bunny and Puerto Rican Muslims: How both remix what it means to be Boricua
  49. The White Stripes join the Rock Roll Hall of Fame − their primal sound reflects Detroit’s industrial roots
  50. China’s new 5-year plan: A high-stakes bet on self-reliance that won’t fix an unbalanced economy