Science

Updated: 13:36 EST

A whale is found to have 30 PLASTIC BAGS in its stomach

The whale was in poor condition, and had become stranded in shallow waters off the coast of Western Norway, leading to wardens putting the animal down (pictured main). Researchers from the University of Bergen analysed the whale's stomach, and found huge amounts of plastic waste (pictured inset). Cuvier’s beaked whales are up to 22ft long and usually feed on squid and deep-sea fish. The mammals do not normally range in Norwegian waters.

NEW Researchers based at the University of Chicago and Monash University in Australia used the internet to reveal global sleep patterns. They found that Argentina and Spain get the most sleep.

NEW The 'SELFLY' drone phone case was invented by ex-Israeli orthodontist, Hagay Klein. Utilising smart camera technology SELFLY uses high end stabilisation allowing it to autonomously fly.

Researchers discovered an ‘evolutionary marvel’ that suggests barbeled dragonfish are designed to engulf huge prey, with a joint in the head that allows them to open their mouths terrifyingly wide.

NEW The Institute of Advanced Architecture of Catalonia has created the world's first 3D-printed bridge. The creation, which is 12 metres long, is printed on micro-refined concrete.

Researchers at Yale University have made a new material from liquid metal and magnetic particles. Researchers can use the material to recreate the powerful magnetic forces at the planet's core.

Apple has patented two wearable batteries. One slots into the watch's strap, while another sits underneath the chassis and attaches to an existing strap (pictured).

Dan Giordano, of Bespoke Treatments Physical Therapy, explains how certain sitting positions and lack of blood flow do far more damage to your body shape than you think.

Researchers from the University of Exeter compared volunteers' movements with those of schizophrenia sufferers to help stop any similarities and potentially provide an early diagnosis.

The ultimate guide to the February night sky

Various astronomical events are occuring throughout the month, including a solar eclipse (pictured right) which will be seen over South America and Africa on February 26. Other events include the Alpha Centaurid meteor shower (stock image top left) on February 8, and a lunar eclipse (pictured bottom left) on February 10.

A new worldwide dating app has been announced that matches you with potential partners based on what you mutually hate. Whether it's slow walkers or butt selfies, there are many topics to pick from.

In a study on rats by researchers at the Scripps Research Institute, San Diego, the technique was found to encourage them to lower their usage of the deadly drug.

The latest beta release for Android suggests that this feature will soon be available to the app's 600 million global users. Instagram has not yet confirmed its roll out.

Facebook's latest mobile feature, which is set to be rolled out globally, encourages users to swipe through the profiles of people attending the same events as them as well as people they work with.

Litter pickers clearing the River Thames said they found 2,500 plastic bottles and also issued a warning over wet wipes and cottonbud sticks which are 'polluting the water in huge numbers'.

The new study, published in the Neurology medical journal, reveals simply heading the ball is more likely to lead to injury which increase one's risk of developing Alzheimer's disease.

The' feature has finally come to the UK after being launched in the US in October 2016. Friends can comment with suggestions on your post and their advice will appear in a map.

Eating a diet rich in vegetable oil could be triggering diseases such as dementia. Nutritionist Dr Catherine Shanahan explains why, and how we can change our diets to avoid further damage.

VR hack creates true 'mixed reality': Developers design app that combines HTC Vive and HoloLens to draw objects mid-air

NEW A developer has designed a method that uses a HTC Vive headset and a Microsoft HoloLens headset to create a true 'mixed reality'. Drew Gottlieb designed a new app called HoloViveObserver that lets multiple people see the same virtual world while wearing the headsets. Players have the ability to collaborate using the same app, allowing them to build objects that hover in the air together.

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Proxima b can now be investigated using new probe design

Researchers at the Max Planck Institute in Munich have designed a probe that measures only a few inches and weighs just 100 grams (0.2lbs) that could explore the mysterious Proxima b. The probe design uses the radiation and gravity from stars to accelerate and slow down. It has previously been difficult to design a probe that travels fast enough to the planet's star system that can still slow down and land on a planet.

Builders laying cables beneath the O2 Arena in Greenwich, London, accidentally discovered and opened a Blue Peter time capsule that was buried under the Millennium Dome in 1998.

The 57-year-old Vulcan nuclear bomber - XH558 - flew for the last time in October 2015 after a summer delighting millions of people at air shows and fly-pasts around the UK.

An international team has created a blue-phase liquid crystal that will allow screens to pack in more pixels, with potential to achieve three-times the pixel count of Apple’s Retina Display.

Researchers from the University of Lincoln say this is the first time the tortoises have been found to exercise judgement on the quality and quantity of food sources, rather than the sole location.

Researchers at Pennsylvania State University have found that the reason groundhog's emerge from hibernation in early February is to reestablish the bonds necessary for mating.

Bones of 19th century prison ship inmates being uncovered

Human bones including skulls, teeth and vertebrae, litter the shoreline on grisly Deadman's Island off the coast of Sheppey, Kent. The uninhabited mudbank, which lies just 40 minutes from central London, was used as a mass burial ground for criminals who died on board prison ships in the 1800s. It is not known how many men and boys were laid to rest on the remote strip, which is now protected by Natural England.

FILE - This May 13, 2014, file photo shows a row of Google self-driving Lexus cars at a Google event outside the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, Calif. California regulators release safety reports filed by 11 companies that have been testing self-driving car prototypes on public roads on Wednesday, Feb. 1, 2017. The papers report the number of times in 2016 that human backup drivers took control from the cars' self-driving software, though companies argue such "disengagements" don't always reflect something going wrong. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg, File)

Self-driving cars are getting better at negotiating California streets and highways without a human backup driver intervening, according to data made public Wednesday by California regulators.

Tesla Motors announced it has changed its corporate name to 'Tesla Inc' in a SEC filing. The move is to reflect its transformation from an automobile maker to a diversified energy products company.

Amazon is set to open a $1.49 billion cargo air hub in Kentucky to take on FedEx and UPS. The hub will let Amazon handle more in-house shipping, allowing them two weed out third parties.

The number of people using Facebook monthly increased 17 percent to 1.86 billion ©LOIC VENANCE (AFP/File)

Facebook reported on Wednesday that its profit more than doubled in the final three months of last year as revenues climbed and its user base grew.

A U.S. jury in Texas on Wednesday ordered Facebook, its VR unit Oculus, and others to pay a combined $500 million to ZeniMax, a video game publisher that says Oculus stole its technology.

Scooby Doobie Doooo! Family sprays holy water after their pet dog spots the ghost of a floating woman inside their civil war battlefield site home 

Tim Welty, 25, visited his parent's home in Virginia when he took a photograph which appears to show a maid from the civil war floating in the corner of the room scaring their pet dog.

Two luxury electric vehicles — the Tesla Model S and the BMW i3 — have fallen short of getting the highest safety ratings in new crash tests by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety.

DNA from the teeth (pictured) found in an Eastern Russian cave known as Devil's Gate indicates that there was no 'population turnover' in East Asian populations for well over seven millennia.

Snap Inc. is reportedly developing ‘smart lenses’ that let users overlay virtual images and objects on landscapes and interact with them. It's said they are an advanced version of 'world lenses'.

An international team of researchers led by Queen Mary, University of London, analysed the genes of more than 500,000 people to identify the genes that make us little or large.

The Atlanta Falcons have got a bit of good news thanks to a researcher who went back and analyzed seven seasons of in-game data from every NFL matchup to create a probability model.

The researchers from Florida Atlantic University discovered the population at the 2.2 million acre Lomami National Park in Congo. Dryas monkeys are thought to be nearing extinction.

Researchers from MIT's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) have made a wearable device that can predict if a conversation is happy or sad.

Deformed wing virus could have a devastating effect on global bee populations say scientists reporting in the Royal Society journal. The UN estimates that 40 per cent of pollinators are at risk of extinction.

Sudan skeleton had prostate stones the size of walnuts 

An international team of researchers, led by the Centre for Sudanese and sub-Saharan studies in Treviso, Italy, discovered the skeleton (pictured top) along with 190 other graves at the Al Khiday cemetery, which lies on the left bank of the White Nile, near Omdurman. At first, the researchers mistook the prostate stones (pictured bottom) for rocks, but scans (pictured middle) showed that they had been formed in the man's prostate.

Scientists at the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation in Canberra, Australia, have made the miracle material graphene (pictured) faster and cheaper than ever before.

Samsung has sent an official press invite to a press conference at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona. It features a picture of a mysterious device which is rumoured to be the Galaxy Tab S3.

Researchers from the University of Toronto and the National Central University of Taiwan found a 195-million-year-old dinosaur rib bone with preserved proteins on it.

Backed by investors including controversial Trump backer Peter Thiel, Moon Express hopes to launch its first craft from Cape Canaveral  in Nov. or Dec. 2017 and win the Lunar X-Prize.

The incredible moment a playful monkey high dives into a pool of water in a human-like display (with a little help from his friend)

The scenes were filmed in as part of the BBC One series 'Spy In The Wild', which features eerily realistic robots disguised as a series of different animals. It will be shown in the UK tonight at 8pm. As well as the diving monkeys, tonight's episode will feature a range of other mischievous creatures, including a tropic bird which is attacked by aggressive frigate birds as they attempt to steal his fish.

Apple sold 78.29 million iPhones in the first quarter ended Dec. 31, up from 74.78 million last year, marking the first quarterly growth in iPhone sales in a year.

An animal reserve in the Netherlands is having apes respond to images of their fellow creatures on a tablet, a programme dubbed 'Tinder for orangutans' by the Dutch press.

This image provided by Kansas State University shows the radiograph revealing the implantation of the pacemaker in the abdomen of a ferret at Kansas State University's Veterinary Health Center in Manhattan, Kan.  The ferret, named Zelda,  is recovering at home after receiving a heart pacemaker during a rare surgery at the university.  Owner Carl Hobi took Zelda to the Veterinary Health Center in Manhattan after Christmas because she was diagnosed with a third-degree block in her heart, which caused a low heart beat and a lack of energy. (Kansas State University via AP)

Zelda had a third-degree block in her heart, which caused a low heart beat and a lack of energy – but, thanks to the ground-breaking surgery, she’s expected to live out a full ten year ferret lifespan.

A study from MIT found that companies sold items for the same prices in their brick-and-mortar and online stores nearly three-quarters of the time. But drugstores will always charge more in-store.

Bill Gates, already the world's richest man, could be the world's first trillionaire in 25 years, says the poverty research foundation Oxfam. Oxfam gives Gates an 11 percent compounded return.

In the hope of competing with Netflix, which currently dominates the TV streaming industry, California-based Facebook could be working on an app for TV, according to a new report.

Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University have developed an Artificial Intelligence (AI) bot named Libratus that beat four of the word's best professional poker players at a casino in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

London-based expert Richard Grant claims to have unearthed the elusive text from a well-known ancient book of fables detailing Alexander the Great's mythical adventures.

What REALLY powers your car: Hypnotic slomo video lets you look inside a combustion engine

An engine comes alive through a process that that creates thousands of explosions every minute. And a YouTuber gives viewers a glimpse of the stunning event using a transparent engine.

Netflix took laziness to a new level. A group of the firm's engineers, called MindFlix, modified a brain-reading headband that lets the wearer scroll through the platform and select items using just their brain.

New measurements, collected at the IceCube Neutrino Observatory at the South Pole, have allowed researchers from Michigan University to see these neutrinos changing into different states.

Axiom Space has already been granted NASA approval to attach its first commercial module to the ISS in 2020, and the firm says this could eventually provide the building blocks for their own station.

Super Mario Run was launched on December 15 in 151 countries, and has been downloaded roughly 78 million times – but, Nintendo didn't convert as many users into paying customers as hoped.

The global hack breached forums 'XBOX360 ISO' and 'PSP ISO' in September 2015 but details of the leak are only just coming through. Forum users are being advised to change their account passwords.

Facebook has chosen to officially endorse an Illuminati page. The group has over 380,000 likes and boasts in its page description: 'We are always watching out for you.'

Daimler is the first auto company to join Uber as it opens up its platform for manufacturers to introduce their own self-driving cars

BBC uses hi-tech robots in Spy In The Wild

An orangutan, as well as an adorable wolf-cub, an utterly convincing meerkat and an incredible floating otter are among 34 animatronic beasts created for the BBC's new series, Spy In The Wild. Three years in the making — and taking in 31 different locations — it's the work of documentary-maker John Downer, who first filmed life inside a pride of lions from the point of view of a roving rock, 'Bouldercam', 16 years ago. Now, some robots can move exactly like the animals they spy on, getting closer to creatures in their natural habitats than ever before. The birthplace of the fantastic beasts is a nondescript mews house in a North London suburb in the studio of John Nolan.

FILE- In this Nov. 15, 2005 file photo, a buoy which is a part of a tsunami warning system developed by GITEWS (German-Indonesian Contribution for the Installation of a Tsunami Warning System) floats in on the sea as German R.V. Sonne is seen in the background during an installation simulation on Sunda straits off Java island, Indonesia. Indonesia's tsunami detection system, made up of seafloor sensors that communicate with transmitting buoys on the surface, has been rendered useless by vandals and lack of funding. Now Indonesian and U.S. scientists say they¿ve developed a way to dispense with the expensive buoys and possibly add crucial extra minutes of warning for vulnerable coastal cities. (AP Photo/Fadlan Arman Syam, File)

 Indonesia's tsunami detection system, made up of seafloor sensors that communicate with transmitting buoys on the surface, has been rendered useless by vandals and lack of funding. 

The astonishing revelation came in response to a tweet, asking California-based Elon Musk if he was working on 'neural lace' – a way of installing computers into the human brain.

Known as 'Live Location Tracking', the feature was spotted in the beta version of the messaging app and Android and iOS. It would allow users to see the location of their friends while in a group chat.

New laws set to come in next month will rule who is to blame if an autonomous vehicle crashes. Transport Secretary Chris Grayling claims that Britain will become a 'world leader' in driverless cars.

Accounts of mysterious spacecrafts and encounters with aliens reflect public interest in UFOs. However, many psychologists think they can provide more down-to-earth, scientific explanations.

The holographic model suggests gravity in the universe comes from thin, vibrating strings. These strings are holograms of events that take place in a simpler, flatter cosmos

The researchers from the University of Southampton, working with colleagues in Canada and Italy, claim there is as much evidence for this theory as for traditional explanations for these irregularities.

An international team of experts has now visited the reef, which runs from French Guyana to the Brazilian state of Maranhão - an area larger than the cities of São Paulo or London.

Ian Pearson, a senior futurologist at the Ipswich-based communication agency Futurizon, claims a human porn star won't be able to compete with virtual characters.

UFO at Nasa laboratory 'spotted' on Google Earth

The satellite images appear to show a 'flying saucer' spacecraft (pictured) parked at Nasa's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) near Los Angeles. YouTube user 'Name Shame' made the bizarre finding yesterday and published the images on his channel yesterday. The YouTuber reveals that the object has even moved on Google Earth since 2014. While it could be seen sat on a patch of grass three years ago, it has since shifted onto the runway.

Todd Strandberg has being compiling a statistical chart he calls ‘The Rapture Index’. It highlights 45 world-shattering events that are said to occur leading up to the rapture.

FILE - In this Feb. 26, 2010 file photo, an apple, stuffed animals, and flowers are among the items placed at a growing memorial to slain teacher Jennifer Paulson across the street from Birney Elementary School in Tacoma, Wash. When the economy tanks, school shootings rise, unlike other violent crime, a new study finds. A multi-disciplinary team of researchers at Northwestern University analyzed data from 379 shootings in schools, not just mass shootings or gang involved ones,  between 1990 and 2013 and found an interesting correlation between changes in national and local unemployment rates and how frequent the shootings happen.
 (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren, File)

Researchers analyzed data from 379 shootings in schools between 1990 and 2013 and found a link between changes in national and local unemployment rates and the frequency of shootings.

Experts, including researchers from the University of Chester and Goldsmiths University of London, say there are 8 key warnings signs and several proven methods to deal with bullies.

Acid reflux affects millions worldwide, but many don't even know they have it. According to US dietary specialist Dr Jonathan Aviv, the best way to banish your it for good is by changing your diet.

London-based start-up, StatusToday, has created AI that will allow your boss to spy on you. It works by tracking your activities. If it notices anything out of the ordinary, it will flag it (stock image)

Researchers at the University of North Carolina (UNC) School of Medicine have discovered an area in the brain responsible for triggering attraction and causing us to notice the opposite sex.

In most species, males evolve eye-catching traits to while females remain drab. But research by Duke University has found that some females evolve attractive traits too, but not to attract males.

Meet the BATBOT: Researchers reveal ultralight drone they say can fly circles around other craft

Holy drone, Batman! Mechanical masterminds have spawned the Bat Bot, a soaring, sweeping and diving robot that may eventually fly circles around other drones. Because it mimics the unique and more flexible way bats fly, this 3-ounce prototype could do a better and safer job getting into disaster sites and scoping out construction zones than bulky drones with spinning rotors, said the three authors of a study released Wednesday in the journal Science Robotics.

Café X has unveiled the 'first robotic café' that can make a range of espresso-based beverages in less than a minute. Customers can order ahead via abn app or at the kiosk in San Francisco, California.

NASA has released the first results of its ground-breaking Twins Study, analyzing the differences between astronaut Scott Kelly, who spent a year in space, and his identical twin brother Mark.

President Donald Trump claimed Monday that Lockheed Martin had knocked $600 million off the cost of the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, a government contract he has sharply criticized.

Light from the most distant object began its journey to us when the universe was 1.4 billion years old, or nearly 10 percent of its present age, and experts say they could shed fresh light on black holes.

The discovery of the small northern bog orchid's strange talent, discovered by University of Washington, could lead to new ways of protecting humans from insects.

Scientists at the University of Trento in Italy are creating artificial cells that are more life-like than ever before. These new cells are able to have two-way conversations with natural cells.

An engraved limestone slab was discovered in France's Vézère Valley by anthropologists from New York University. It depicts some of the earliest known graphic imagery from Western Eurasia.

Not everyone feels their sharpest on a Monday - but this new puzzle should test out just how strong your powers of perception are after the weekend.

Mummified royals loved tattoos and CANNABIS

The tattooed Altai Mountain royals were entombed in ice in their burial mound, preserving their remains for thousands of years until Soviet archeologists excavated the site in the Stalin era. But now modern technology is being used to obtain secrets of the life and death of these mummies, believed to be a curly-haired chieftain and his pig-tailed wife or concubine. The remains have been held in the world famous Hermitage Museum in St Petersburg since 1949.

The Facebook Stories feature is first being trialled in Ireland, but is expected to be rolled out in more countries in the coming months.

Apple has published a new patent describing a vaporizer that lets users vape both a ‘solid precursor’ and a ‘liquid chemical’, which suggests that it could also be used for marijuana.

Google parent Alphabet Inc posted fourth-quarter profit below analysts' estimates on Thursday, raising concerns that growth in the company's powerhouse advertising business may be slowing.

Scientists at the College of Veterinary Medicine in Shaanxi, China have used gene-editing technology, known as CRISPR, to produce cows with resistance to tuberculosis.

Self-taught photographer Oscar Keserci has taken mesmerising nocturnal images of millions of stars over the island of Rhodes, Greece, and at home near Kirkkonummi, Finland.

Researchers from McMaster University in Hamilton have excavated 123 individuals from four cemeteries near the remains of a medieval Christian monastery in Sudan.

The 'dark web' are pages that are hosted by web servers using the anonymous web protocol called Tor. Its original purpose was for good, but has also been used by criminals.

Google is using historical parking data to warn users about the parking situation at their destination. Users just plug their destination into the parking difficulty icon to see a score of 'limited', 'medium' or 'easy'.

British supermarket Ocado is testing a soft robotic hand that picks and packs fruits and vegetables in its warehouses. RBO Hand 2 uses flexible fingers to grasp items and could replace human workers.

The global scam sends users an email, appearing to be from Netflix, which ask them to update their membership details. The email includes a link that shows a fake log-in page.

Researchers from around the world, including a team from Google, have unveiled what they say is the first practical blueprint for the 'holy grail' of computing - a quantum computer.

Archaeologists have discovered more than 25 skeletons in the centre of the Cambridge University campus, and expect to discover dozens or more in the coming weeks.

The incredible image was captured by the JunoCam imager on Nasa's Juno spacecraft on December 11, 2016, as the spacecraft performed a close flyby of the gas giant planet.

A new mathematical tool developed by a researcher at Rockefeller University has revealed the rhythm of electrical activity in the brain as it responds to external stimuli, illustrated in colorful diagrams.

In this undated photo made available by NASA, from left, veteran astronaut Virgil Grissom, first American spacewalker Ed White and rookie Roger Chaffee, stand for a photograph in Cape Kennedy, Fla. During a launch pad test on Jan. 27, 1967, a flash fire erupted inside their capsule killing the three Apollo crew members. (NASA via AP)

On Friday's anniversary, the hatch that trapped Gus Grissom, Ed White and Roger Chaffee inside their capsule at the launch pad finally went on display at Florida's Kennedy Space Center.

The hybrid animal was created by scientists from Stanford University in California and the University of Tokyo. The same technique could one day be used in humans.

These incredible pictures reveal the strange assortment of plans developers have had to house people or alleviate traffic in the centre of London.

Dozens of families in pollution hotspots in Cornwall could be affected by new 'clean air' proposals, which would lead to some homes being taken from residents under purchasing laws.

The tricky puzzle was posted on Facebook by Butuan, Philippines-based Keril. So far over 1,500 people have attempted to solve the puzzle, with varying results.

The puzzle, which comes from a new book by London-based Alex Bellos, requires you to transform two triangles made from six matches into four triangles, by moving just two matches.

This optical illusion, posted to Playbuzz, features a group of men who are about to engage in a duel. It is claimed that only one per cent of the population will be able to spot the hidden assassin.

The Earth’s magnetic field surrounds our planet, protecting life from harmful solar radiation by deflecting charged particles away. Far from being constant, this field is continuously changing.

Researchers from GUARD Archaeology have excavated the Trusty's Hill Fort in Dumfries and Galloway, and believe this could be the elusive kingdom of Rheged.

Images released from Colblindor, a blog run by Daniel Flück from Zurich, give an idea what the four types of colour blindness people experience actually look like.

At the Sun Temple in Colorado, constructed around AD 1200, researchers from Arizona State University have discovered a slew of sophisticated shapes that are still familiar today.

Massive chunks leftover from the formation of the planets may have been to blame, creating craters on Mars and the moon, and ancient scars that have since been erased from Earth’s surface.

A mathematician from Cardiff University claims naturally occurring acoustic-gravity waves (AGWs) could react with a tsunami in a way that forces its energy to spread out, reducing its height.

A researcher from Nottingham Trent University reveals six cosmic catastrophes that could have the potential to destroy Earth including high energy solar flares and an asteroid impact.

The makers of Vespa scooter has built a new two-wheeled vehicle that is not made to carry humans. Called Gita, the cargo robot can haul 40lbs of goods while following behind a human user.

The new picture from the Very Large Telescope uses roughly two billion pictures to display the Cat’s Paw and Lobster nebulae, which sit 5500 and 8000 light-years away from Earth.

The Southern Methodist University has found that a runner's pattern of force application on the ground is due to the motion of two parts of the body, which could help create customized running shoes.

The new images from the Cassini spacecraft provide an unprecedented look at the details of the outer parts of the main rings, revealing a number of interesting features, from ‘straw’ to ‘propellers.’

Researchers at the University of Nottingham, led by Dr Chris King, examined the historic building using 3D scanning lasers.

Researchers from the University of Glasgow played a variety of songs to a group of pets at a rehoming centre in Dumbarton, Scotland.

A UFO hunter claims to have spotted ‘an Iron Man robot’ hitchhiking on Comet 67P. Scott C Waring found the bizarre sighting while examining images from the European Space Agency.

Humans have a much longer and wider penis than other great apes. Even the largest of gorillas, more than twice as heavy as a human, has a penis just two and half inches long when erect.

Researchers from Wits University, in Johannesburg, found evidence for a continental crust beneath Mauritius (pictured), which would have been part of the continent 'Mauritia'.

The skeleton was found in St Mary Magdalen leprosarium near Winchester, Hampshire. University of Winchester scientists say it shows how leprosy spread due to pilgrimages.

Footage captured by the USGS’s Hawaiian Volcano Observatory reveals the remarkable volcanic ‘firehose’ in action as it produces dangerous blasts that pose a threat both on land and at sea.

Maps from NASA’s Earth Observatory reveal just how extreme the ice loss could be, with some areas surrounding Camp Century expected to shed 10 or more feet from the surface per year.

The strange object, named 2016 WF9, was discovered last year. Self-proclaimed Russian astronomer Dr Dyomin Damir Zakharovich said it is heading straight towards our planet.

Global brands including FedEx, Carrefour and F1, have hidden symbols within their logos, in a bid to make their brands as memorable as possible.

Teams of students have tested their half scale pod designs in a specially built 1km long SpaceX test track - with Delft University taking first prize.

Researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology inspired by a video of a frog playing a video game have discovered the secret behind a frogs high speed, sticky tongue.

Oxfordshire-based Tokamak Energy's technology revolves around high temperature superconducting magnets, which allow for low-power and small-size devices, but high performance.

NASA’s Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope has captured rare ‘behind-the-limb’ solar flares coming from the far side of the sun. The events occurred on October 11, 2013, January 6 and September 1, 2014.

Leaked footage from the company’s first presentation of Handle reveals a robot that looks like the child of the Atlas bot and a Segway, with self-balancing capabilities to prevent falls.

Researchers at Duke University have identified a part of the brain that lets you 'superfocus' on your environment and ignore distractions.

The European Space Agency says the 50m high dome, close to a planned moonbase near to the moon's south pole, would give the first settlers 'a place of contemplation'.

A stunning new map from Imgur user Fejetlenfej shows the complex network of rivers and streams in the contiguous United States, highlighting the massive expanse of basins across the country.