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Why we need to get back to Venus

  • Written by Paul K. Byrne, Assistant Professor of Planetary Geology, North Carolina State University
On June 5-6, 2012, NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory collected images of one of the rarest predictable solar events: the transit of Venus across the face of the Sun. NASA/SDO, AIA

Just next door, cosmologically speaking, is a planet almost exactly like Earth. It’s about the same size, is made of about the same stuff and formed around the same...

Read more: Why we need to get back to Venus

Bargain-hunting robocars could spell the end for downtown parking – cities need to plan ahead now

  • Written by Corey Harper, Postdoctoral Research Associate in Civil and Environmental Engineering, Carnegie Mellon University
What does a future full of AVs mean for all the spaces reserved for downtown parking?Kris Cros/Unsplash, CC BY

Imagine a scene from the near-future: You get dropped off downtown by a driverless car. You slam the door and head into your office or appointment. But then where does the autonomous vehicle go?

It’s a question that cities would be...

Read more: Bargain-hunting robocars could spell the end for downtown parking – cities need to plan ahead now

Curious kids: Why don't hummingbirds get fat or sick from drinking sugary nectar?

  • Written by Jessica Pollock, Research Biologist at Intermountain Bird Observatory, Boise State University
Hummingbirds flap their wings 800 times per minute.Dino Hans Farnese/Shutterstock.com

Curious Kids is a series for children of all ages. If you have a question you’d like an expert to answer, send it to CuriousKidsUS@theconversation.com.


Why don’t hummingbirds get fat or sick from drinking sugary nectar? – Dhruv, age 15,...

Read more: Curious kids: Why don't hummingbirds get fat or sick from drinking sugary nectar?

Changes for a landmark agreement mean immigrant children face harsher treatment in US

  • Written by Kevin Johnson, Dean and Professor of Public Interest Law and Chicana/o Studies, University of California, Davis
Immigrants line up in the dining hall at the U.S. government's newest holding center for migrant children in Carrizo Springs, Texas. AP/Eric Gay

The Trump administration is trying to terminate the Flores settlement, a legal agreement that determines how immigrant children are treated in U.S. immigration detention.

The 1997 settlement established...

Read more: Changes for a landmark agreement mean immigrant children face harsher treatment in US

400 years of black giving: From the days of slavery to the 2019 Morehouse graduation

  • Written by Tyrone Freeman, Assistant Professor of Philanthropic Studies, Director of Undergraduate Programs, Lilly Family School of Philanthropy, IUPUI
Two of the top donors who made constructing the Smithsonian's National Museum of African American History and Culture possible were black.AP Photo/Susan Walsh

When African American businessman Robert F. Smith declared during a Morehouse College commencement speech that he would pay off the student loan debt of the entire 2019 graduating class of...

Read more: 400 years of black giving: From the days of slavery to the 2019 Morehouse graduation

How to have an all-renewable electric grid

  • Written by David Timmons, Associate Professor of Economics, University of Massachusetts Boston
An all-renewable grid will mean more electricity and more transmission lines.Russ Allison Loar/flickr, CC BY-NC-ND

The main solution to climate change is well known – stop burning fossil fuels. How to do this is more complicated, but as a scholar who does energy modeling, I and others see the outlines of a post-fossil-fuel future: We make...

Read more: How to have an all-renewable electric grid

Don't ban new technologies – experiment with them carefully

  • Written by Ryan Muldoon, Associate Professor of Philosophy, University at Buffalo, The State University of New York
It's a mess, but is it all bad?EHFXC/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA

For many years, Facebook’s internal slogan was “move fast and break things.” And that’s what the company did – along with most other Silicon Valley startups and the venture capitalists who fund them. Their general attitude is one of asking for forgiveness...

Read more: Don't ban new technologies – experiment with them carefully

How Hong Kong's protests are affecting its economy

  • Written by Allen Morrison, Professor of Global Management, Arizona State University
The Hong Kong protests have drawn massive and diverse crowds.AP Photo/Kin Cheung

After nearly three months of unrest, the demonstrations in Hong Kong show no signs of slowing down.

What began as opposition to a controversial extradition bill has morphed into a broader movement to defend Hong Kong’s wider social and political freedoms....

Read more: How Hong Kong's protests are affecting its economy

White nationalists' extreme solution to the coming environmental apocalypse

  • Written by Alexandra Minna Stern, Professor of American Culture, History, and Women's Studies, University of Michigan

White nationalists around the world are appropriating the language of environmentalism.

The white nationalist who allegedly massacred 22 people in El Paso in early August posted a four-page screed on the chatroom 8chan. In it, the shooter blames his attack on the “Hispanic invasion of Texas” and the impending “cultural and ethnic...

Read more: White nationalists' extreme solution to the coming environmental apocalypse

Increasing numbers of Americans support gun background checks

  • Written by Kent E. Portney, Professor and Director, Texas A&M University
Some states have universal background checks for gun purchases.Lutsenko_Oleksandr/Shutterstock.com

In the aftermath of the shootings in El Paso, Texas, and Dayton, Ohio, public debate once again turned to what Congress should do to reduce gun violence.

One of the challenges that many policymakers face is understanding the views of the general...

Read more: Increasing numbers of Americans support gun background checks

More Articles ...

  1. Politicians don't seem to laugh at themselves as much anymore
  2. How to invest if you're worried a recession is coming
  3. Climate scientists may not be the best communicators of climate threats
  4. Mexican women are angry about rape, murder and government neglect – and they want the world to know
  5. What is Haitian Voodoo?
  6. When does trash talking work?
  7. College rankings might as well be student rankings
  8. Trump administration revives public charge clause that kept Nazi-era refugees from the US
  9. The misguided attacks on 'This Land Is Your Land'
  10. How two Islamic groups fell from power to persecution: Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood and Turkey's Gulenists
  11. What states that don't protect LGBTQ workers from discrimination have in common
  12. Students who plan to seek more education than needed for their career earn more money
  13. Guatemala: Corrupción, inseguridad son los primeros retos para el próximo presidente
  14. Guatemala: Corrupción e inseguridad son los primeros retos del próximo presidente
  15. Cómo enseñar mejor a nuestros hijos en la era del big data
  16. Stem cells could regenerate organs – but only if the body won't reject them
  17. Ocean warming has fisheries on the move, helping some but hurting more
  18. Bring on the technology bans!
  19. 5 tips for college students to avoid burnout
  20. Before Trump eyed Greenland: Here’s what happened last time the US bought a large chunk of the Arctic
  21. Who is responsible when an inmate commits suicide?
  22. Who is responsible when an inmate dies by suicide?
  23. Too many people think satirical news is real
  24. Free college proposals should include private colleges
  25. A cyberattack could wreak destruction comparable to a nuclear weapon
  26. How Democrats can win back workers in 2020
  27. Why are people still dying from Legionnaires' disease?
  28. 'Christian left' is reviving in America, appalled by treatment of migrants
  29. Organic food health benefits have been hard to assess, but that could change
  30. What's behind the protests in Kashmir?
  31. Why building community – even through discomfort – could help stressed college students
  32. Shouldn’t there be a law against reckless opioid sales? Turns out, there is
  33. What's the right way for scientists to edit human genes? 5 essential reads
  34. Why are so many languages spoken in some places and so few in others?
  35. A brief astronomical history of Saturn's amazing rings
  36. Fifty years ago, Jimi Hendrix's Woodstock anthem expressed the hopes and fears of a nation
  37. 50 years ago, Jimi Hendrix's Woodstock anthem expressed the hopes and fears of a nation
  38. One budget line Congress can agree on: Spending billions on the US military
  39. Huge wildfires in the Arctic and far North send a planetary warning
  40. Mexico wants to run a tourist train through its Mayan heartland — should it?
  41. Surprising volunteers with awards is one way to keep them on board
  42. We use satellites to measure water scarcity
  43. Want better sleep? Try a warm bath or shower 1-2 hours before bedtime, study suggests
  44. New laws give victims more time to report rape or sexual assault – even Jeffrey Epstein's
  45. Saving endangered species: 5 essential reads
  46. Restoring soil can help address climate change
  47. Guatemala's next president has few plans for fixing rampant corruption, crime and injustice
  48. I'm one of hundreds of archaeologists exiled from Syria who's mourning what the war is costing us
  49. A neuroscience-based action plan to deal with stress after El Paso and Dayton shootings
  50. Making money off of politics isn't new – it was business as usual in the Gilded Age