plasma
The Farthest Spacecraft from Earth Picks Up an Unexpected New Signal
Voyager 1 has likely made the first continuous measurement of the density of matter in interstellar space.
I Can't Donate Plasma to COVID Research Because I Had Sex with a Man 3 Years Ago
The 22-year-old's case has provoked a human rights debate in the Netherlands.
Everything You Wanted to Know About Donating COVID-19 Antibodies
If you've recovered from the coronavirus, your plasma might be useful to other people.
Scientists See Trippy Quadrupled Black Hole While Peering Through a Galaxy
Using another galaxy as a telescope created a trippy quadrupling effect in a rare image of an exploding black hole from the early universe.
Scientists Built a Tiny Version of the Sun in Wisconsin
What we can learn about our star by using the 'Big Red Ball.'
This Black Hole Is Wildly Ejecting Plasma Jets as It Eats a Star
"This is one of the most extraordinary black hole systems I've ever come across.”
New Supercomputer Simulations Show How Plasma Jets Escape Black Holes
Black holes swallow everything that comes in contact with them, so how do plasma jets manage to escape their intense gravity?
Scientists Solve the Mystery of Why the Northern and Southern Lights Don't Match
A leading explanation for the different patterns seen in Earth’s northern and southern auroras has been ruled out.
Scientists Made Plasma That Is 50 Times Colder Than Deep Space
Scientists have created a laser-cooled neutral plasma for the first time that will be used to simulate some of the hottest and most exotic matter in the universe.
These Plasma Patches Could Replace Antibiotics to Treat Chronic Wounds
The German company Coldplasmatech is using the weirdest state of matter to fight superbugs and accelerate healing.
How Doctors Keep Jehovah’s Witnesses Alive When They Refuse Blood Transfusions
“I was raised in a religion where blood transfusions were the worst possible thing you could ever do.”
Watch This Plasma Ring Float in Open Air
The plasma ring was created using a stream of water that was less than the width of a human hair and moving as fast as a bullet.