Nature is a breeding ground for innovative solutions to everything from aging to plastic pollution
Ongoing tests show that the technology is an effective way to track the animals and monitor for threats
Andrew Parker has produced some of the brightest hues in the world. So, what’s his secret?
After seeing plastic polluting her favorite beaches year after year, Madison Checketts decided it was time to do something about it
A New Look for the National Air and Space Museum
See the Kepler technology demonstrator at the National Air and Space Museum, along with a host of technologies that brought success to space exploration
Ceramic nests deployed on penguin colonies in South Africa could shield the endangered seabirds from rising temperatures
The pioneering glassmaker and octogenarian is the subject of a new Smithsonian Channel documentary
Children can build strategy, critical thinking and resilience during expert-approved play
It’s an agricultural moonshot, but scientists hope to make plants like corn, wheat and barley as heat and drought resistant as cactus
Friends of Pando, a nonprofit, is in the process of creating the largest image ever recorded of this single aspen clone in Utah
Proteins left behind on historic artifacts are revealing centuries-old secrets
A New Look for the National Air and Space Museum
The remarkable story of how the duo grew to become world-changing inventors and international celebrities
Often treated as a weed, the versatile prickly pear cactus could be the next big specialty crop
The predator's distinctive texture is the envy of engineers trying to maximize hydrodynamics
The algorithm scans electronic records and may reduce sepsis deaths, but widespread adoption could be a challenge
The inexpensive Maka Niu collects video and data at depths more than five times greater than trained scuba divers can go
A New Look for the National Air and Space Museum
Follow the October reopening of America’s most-visited museum with exclusive coverage from Smithsonian magazine
Alicia Escott and Heidi Quante founded the Bureau of Linguistical Reality to create words to help describe people's feelings about climate change
The 1909 Military Flyer is the centerpiece of the "Early Flight" exhibition at the National Air and Space Museum
Some wavelengths of light in a range called far-UVC kill microbes in experiments and appear to be harmless to people
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