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Long before Armstrong and Aldrin, artists were stoking dreams of space travel

  • Written by Anne Collins Goodyear, Co-Director of the Bowdoin College Museum of Art, Bowdoin College
Chesley Bonestell's detailed drawings of space stations in Collier's inspired millions of readers. James Vaughan/flickr, CC BY-NC

In the midst of the space race, Hereward Lester Cooke, the former co-director of the NASA Art Program, observed, “Space travel started in the imagination of the artist.”

If the 50th anniversary of the first...

Read more: Long before Armstrong and Aldrin, artists were stoking dreams of space travel

DNA testing companies offer telomere testing – but what does it tell you about aging and disease risk?

  • Written by Patricia Opresko, Professor of Environmental and Occupational Health, University of Pittsburgh
A telomere age test kit from Telomere Diagnostics Inc. and saliva collection kit from 23andMe.Anna Hoychuk/Shutterstock.com

Over the past few years direct-to-consumer genetic tests that extract information from DNA in your chromosomes have become popular. Through a simple cheek swab, saliva collection or finger prick, companies offer the...

Read more: DNA testing companies offer telomere testing – but what does it tell you about aging and disease...

How your diet contributes to nutrient pollution and dead zones in lakes and bays

  • Written by Donald Scavia, Professor Emeritus, School for Environment and Sustainability, University of Michigan
Charter boat Capt. Dave Spangler holds a sample of algae from Maumee Bay in Lake Erie, Sept. 15, 2017.AP Photo/Paul Sancya, File

Every year in early summer, scientists at universities, research institutions and federal agencies release forecasts for the formation of “dead zones” and harmful algal blooms in the Gulf of Mexico, the...

Read more: How your diet contributes to nutrient pollution and dead zones in lakes and bays

Commercial supersonic aircraft could return to the skies

  • Written by Iain Boyd, Professor of Aerospace Engineering, University of Michigan
Don't call it a comeback.Aero Icarus/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA

Flying faster than the speed of sound still sounds futuristic for regular people, more than 15 years after the last commercial supersonic flights ended. The planes that made those journeys, the 14 aircraft collectively known as the Concorde, flew from 1976 to 2003. It traveled three...

Read more: Commercial supersonic aircraft could return to the skies

Why states and cities should stop handing out billions in economic incentives to companies

  • Written by Nathan Jensen, Professor of Government, University of Texas at Austin
Some states and cities are getting very little for the taxpayer dollars they hand out to companies. Atstock Productions/Shutterstock.com

U.S. states and cities hand out tens of billions in taxpayer dollars every year to companies as economic incentives.

These businesses are supposed to use the money, typically distributed through economic...

Read more: Why states and cities should stop handing out billions in economic incentives to companies

How much is your data worth to tech companies? Lawmakers want to tell you, but it's not that easy to calculate

  • Written by Samuel Lengen, Research Associate at Data Science Institute, University of Virginia
Your social media data is immeasurably valuable.13_Phunkhod/Shutterstock.com

New proposed legislation by U.S. senators Mark R. Warner and Josh Hawley seeks to protect privacy by forcing tech companies to disclose the “true value” of their data to users.

Specifically, companies with more than 100 million users would have to provide each...

Read more: How much is your data worth to tech companies? Lawmakers want to tell you, but it's not that easy...

How did people clean their teeth in the olden days?

  • Written by Jane Cotter, Assistant Professor of Dental Hygiene, Texas A&M University
People worked for healthy teeth long before nylon brushes hit the market.Mila Davidovic/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.


Dental hygiene has come a long way since the days of wine-soaked toothpicks and the urine...

Read more: How did people clean their teeth in the olden days?

'The Farewell' highlights tough conversations families face when confronted with death

  • Written by Nick Iannarino, Assistant Professor of Health Communication, University of Michigan
When it comes to a terminal diagnosis, how can families talk about the unthinkable?A24

To my 87-year-old grandmother, not many subjects are taboo.

She was treated for colorectal cancer in 1996, and she still laughs when she recounts experiencing uncontrollable flatulence in front of houseguests.

But when death comes up, she has less to say. As my...

Read more: 'The Farewell' highlights tough conversations families face when confronted with death

An invisible government agency produces crucial national security intelligence, but is anyone listening?

  • Written by Gregory F. Treverton, Professor of Practice in International Relations, University of Southern California – Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
President Harry S Truman established the initial version of the National Intelligence Council. AP Photo

This year marks the 40th anniversary of a little-known U.S. organization that has provided crucial intelligence and analysis to presidents for all those decades: the National Intelligence Council.

Right after World War II, President Harry Truman...

Read more: An invisible government agency produces crucial national security intelligence, but is anyone...

Mexican president López Obrador has a woman problem

  • Written by Luis Gómez Romero, Senior Lecturer in Human Rights, Constitutional Law and Legal Theory, University of Wollongong

After the leftist firebrand Andrés Manuel López Obrador won the Mexican presidency in a landslide last year, he vowed to “govern for all, starting with the poor.”

In Mexico, “the poor” includes many women, who earn 34% less than men for doing the same job. Women in Mexico also face incessant catcalling and...

Read more: Mexican president López Obrador has a woman problem

More Articles ...

  1. Western states buy time with a 7-year Colorado River drought plan, but face a hotter, drier future
  2. At least 2% of US public water systems are like Flint's – Americans just don't hear about them
  3. Selecting groceries ahead of time helps some shoppers make healthier choices
  4. 4 questions answered on sex trafficking in the US
  5. The long, bipartisan history of dealing with immigrants harshly
  6. The forgotten history of segregated swimming pools and amusement parks
  7. A booming international movie market is transforming Hollywood
  8. Neuroscience and artificial intelligence can help improve each other
  9. Women are less supportive of space exploration – getting a woman on the Moon might change that
  10. How Congress lost power over trade deals – and why some lawmakers want it back
  11. Physician burnout: Why legal and regulatory systems may need to step in
  12. Climate change is affecting crop yields and reducing global food supplies
  13. Counterfeit alcohol, sometimes containing jet fuel or embalming fluid, is a growing concern for tourists abroad
  14. New York's new rental protections won't end the outsize influence of big developers who pay the city's bills
  15. New York's new rental protections won't end the outside influence of big developers who pay the city's bills
  16. 5 Moon-landing innovations that changed life on Earth
  17. A long-running immigration problem: The government sometimes detains and deports US citizens
  18. Hong Kong protests continue as China asserts more control over the island territory
  19. Why I made an app to document the seclusion and restraint of special education students
  20. Without parking, thousands of Americans who live in vehicles have nowhere to go
  21. Roberts rules: The 2 most important Supreme Court decisions this year were about fair elections and the chief justice
  22. So far cultured meat has been burgers – the next big challenge is animal-free steaks
  23. How indigenous women revolutionized Bolivian wrestling
  24. Confused about what to eat? Science can help
  25. What is personalized learning and why is it so controversial? 5 questions answered
  26. High-value opportunities exist to restore tropical rainforests around the world – here's how we mapped them
  27. Amazon is turning 25 – here's a look back at how it changed the world
  28. How America’s Founding Fathers felt about tariffs
  29. Mexicans in US routinely confront legal abuse, racial profiling, ICE targeting and other civil rights violations
  30. Why do rebel groups apologize?
  31. Trusting gut instincts to decide whether a military action is proportional opens a leader to psychological traps
  32. How the Dalai Lama is chosen and why China wants to appoint its own
  33. US agriculture needs a 21st-century New Deal
  34. Drugs on a coil free patients from the burden of taking pills for treating infectious diseases
  35. Thanks, 'Avengers: Endgame,' for reminding us why inflation matters
  36. Every dog has its day, but it's not the Fourth of July
  37. George Washington's biggest battle? With his dentures, made from hippo ivory and maybe slaves' teeth
  38. Red, white but rarely blue - the science of fireworks colors, explained
  39. Red, white but rarely blue – the science of fireworks colors, explained
  40. Will they ever wake up? New study on consciousness after brain injury shows 'maybe'
  41. Why it matters that more athletes are talking about their mental health
  42. Male nonprofit CEOs earn more – but the problem runs deeper than a simple gender pay gap
  43. Men do see the mess – they just aren't judged for it the way women are
  44. It takes years to fully recover from big storms like Sandy
  45. Flying colors: Researcher reveals hidden world through the eyes of butterflies
  46. Al-Qaida is stronger today than it was on 9/11
  47. Russian Twitter propaganda predicted 2016 US election polls
  48. The US economy likely just entered its longest ever expansion – here's who's benefiting in 3 charts
  49. Sugar substitutes: Is one better or worse for diabetes? For weight loss? An expert explains
  50. Florida makes the restoration of voting rights contingent on criminal debt payments