2018 Smithsonian Ingenuity Awards
Meet Scott Bolton, the Visionary Behind the NASA Mission to Jupiter
The Juno project will take on the mysteries of the gas giant that may in turn help us understand our own planet’s origins
The Ten Best STEM Toys to Give as Gifts This Year
Experts and kids of all ages recommend these tech toys, which inspire year-round curiosity
MIT Flies Model Airplane Powered by the Blue Glow of Electric Fields and Ionic Winds
The model plane, with no moving parts, could pave the way for new flight technology that emits no pollutants
The Patents Behind Pumpkin Pie
This Thanksgiving, when you take a bite of the traditional pie, take a moment to think about the inventions that have gone into the making of it
NASA Will Attempt Its Eighth Mars Landing on Monday
Touching down on the surface of the Red Planet is one of the most difficult engineering challenges ever attempted, and InSight is about to give it a go
Jose Gomez-Marquez Wants to Turn Doctors and Nurses into Makers
Kennedy Center president Deborah Rutter interviews the co-founder of MIT’s Little Devices Lab about democratizing health technology
The World’s First Synthesizer Was a 200-Ton Behemoth
Thaddeus Cahill’s Telharmonium may not have been a huge success, but it was an important achievement in music history
This Apartment-Size Wind Turbine Makes Use of Gusts Coming From All Directions
Winner of this year’s James Dyson Award, the O-Wind Turbine is designed for the chaotic wind patterns of urban environments
AOL Co-Founder Steve Case Talks With Smithsonian Geologist John Grant About the Search for Life on Mars
In the near future, we are going to know if life exists elsewhere in the universe
Scientists Are About to Redefine the Kilogram and Shake Up Our System of Measures
After more than 100 years of defining the kilogram according to a metal artifact, humanity is preparing to change the unit based on a constant of nature
A Smithsonian Sports Curator Explains How Athletes Turn Social and Political Issues into National Conversations
Atlantic staff writer Frank Foer interviews Damion Thomas about athletes moving from a position of apathy to engagement
The Future Is Bright If More Teens Could Think About High School the Way Kavya Kopparapu Does
Cellist Yo-Yo Ma talks with the founder of the Girls Computing League about the promise of her generation
Astrophysicist Michelle Thaller on Understanding Our Place in the Universe
Autodesk vice president Brian Mathews talks with the NASA science communicator about the search for life on other planets and why it’s important
The Surprising Origins of Kotex Pads
Before the first disposable sanitary napkin hit the mass market, periods were thought of in a much different way
Eno Umoh Is Getting Kids to Think About the Positive Powers of Drones
Latina American writer Gabby Rivera interviews the co-founder of Global Air Media about giving students access to the technology
Optical Tweezers Give Scientists a Tool to Test the Laws of Quantum Mechanics
Quantum superposition is one of the great mysteries of physics—a mass existing in two states at once—and scientists hope to probe the phenomenon
What Are the Economic Incentives to Invent?
Prizes and patents may fulfill different needs, but together they fuel innovation
There’s a New Ranking System For Best Countries to Live In, and Norway Isn’t Number One
Most researchers use the UN’s Human Development Index to measure each country’s progress, but that system has flaws. A new index aims to do it better
Could 3-D Printing Save Music Education?
D.C. chef Erik Bruner-Yang interviews Jill-of-all-trades Kaitlyn Hova about her plan to infuse STEM education with open source, 3-D printable instruments
Restaurateur José Andrés Dreams of Milking the Clouds
In a conversation with architect David Rockwell, the philanthropic chef urges an invested effort in technology that could collect water from the clouds
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