When NASA's Cyclone Global Navigation Satellite System, or CYGNSS, launched into orbit in 2016, none of the University of Michigan Engineering researchers who developed the system expected it to ...
The Escapist speaks to ConchShip Games founder Qiezi about The Scroll of Taiwu, Wuxia, English localization, and building a ...
Irene Okpanachi is a Features writer covering Android devices, laptops, portable projectors, VR headsets, software, and AI recorders for Android Police and Talk Android. She has five years' experience ...
The newest Star Fox game for the Nintendo Switch 2 has 18 stages (counting Venom twice) to explore, though you’ll only play through seven in each playthrough. The first mission is always Corneria, and ...
Homing pigeons have long fascinated scientists with their ability to find their way back over long distances. But exactly how they do it has remained one of nature’s biggest mysteries. However, a new ...
Scientists have uncovered a surprising navigation system in pigeons: iron-filled immune cells in the liver that may act like tiny magnetic sensors. Birds deprived of these cells struggled to find ...
Homing pigeons rely on a variety of signals to navigate, including magnetism. But it hasn't been clear how they detect magnetic cues. Researchers propose the answer may be found in the birds' livers.
Homing pigeons don’t rely on gut instinct to return to the roost. But a nearby organ — the liver — might point the way. White blood cells in the birds’ livers accumulate iron and act as an internal ...
Scientists have long known that migrating birds and homing pigeons navigate in part by sensing the Earth’s magnetic fields, especially at night or in overcast conditions when visual landmarks or ...
Researchers taught young loggerhead turtles to associate certain magnetic fields with feeding, prompting a distinctive dance when they recognized the signal. After a magnetic pulse briefly disrupted ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results