Explained: Margin of error
When you hear poll results reported with a certain margin of error, that’s only part of the story.
When you hear poll results reported with a certain margin of error, that’s only part of the story.
As electronic and optical devices get ever faster, terms for ever-smaller increments of time are coming into wider use.
What to do in the event of an asteroid streaking toward Earth? Activate the asteroid ‘fire drill.’
How do you know when a new finding is significant? The sigma value can tell you — but watch out for dead fish.
How do scientists measure jolts such as the recent disaster in Japan? Hint: They don’t use the Richter scale.
Decentralized wireless networks could have applications in distributed sensing and robotics and maybe even personal communications.
How astronomers learn whether a planet is habitable by observing slight changes in light emanating from its parent star.
It’s not what conventional wisdom holds, as an MIT economist — who heads the bureau charged with identifying U.S. downturns — makes clear.
After glancing over a 100-page proof that claimed to solve the biggest problem in computer science, Scott Aaronson bet his house that it was wrong. Why?
The same phenomenon behind changes in the pitch of a moving ambulance’s siren is helping astronomers locate and study distant planets.
Understanding how electrons get excited is crucial to creating solar cells and light-emitting diodes
When trying to control the way heat moves through solids, it is often useful to think of it as a flow of particles.
By colliding particles, physicists hope to recreate the earliest moments of our universe, on a much smaller scale.
The economic crisis has revived an old philosophical idea about risk and uncertainty. But what is it, exactly?