N LogoThe National News Logo
  • My Profile
  • Saved articles
  • Newsletters
  • Sign out
UserSign in
  • Register
  • Sign in
News
UAE
Gulf
MENA
US
UK
Europe
Asia
Business
Aviation
Economy
Energy
Money
Property
Banking
Markets
Opinion
Comment
Editorial
Obituaries
Cartoon
Feedback
Future
Science
Space
Technology
Climate
Environment
Road to Net Zero
Health
Culture
Art & Design
Books
Film & TV
Music & On-stage
Pop Culture
Lifestyle
Travel
Fashion & Beauty
Food
Motoring
Luxury
Home & Garden
Wellbeing
Things to do
Sport
World Cup 2026
Football
Cricket
F1
Tennis
Combat Sports
Cycling
World Cup 2026
Newsletters
TN Magazine
  • International Edition
  • UAE Edition
      Podcasts Newsletters Follow us App Video
      World Cup 2026NewslettersTN MagazineWeekend
      News
      UAE
      Gulf
      MENA
      US
      UK
      Europe
      Asia
      Business
      Aviation
      Economy
      Energy
      Money
      Property
      Banking
      Markets
      Opinion
      Comment
      Editorial
      Obituaries
      Cartoon
      Feedback
      Future
      Science
      Space
      Technology
      Climate
      Environment
      Road to Net Zero
      Health
      Culture
      Art & Design
      Books
      Film & TV
      Music & On-stage
      Pop Culture
      Lifestyle
      Travel
      Fashion & Beauty
      Food
      Motoring
      Luxury
      Home & Garden
      Wellbeing
      Things to do
      Sport
      World Cup 2026
      Football
      Cricket
      F1
      Tennis
      Combat Sports
      Cycling
      News
      UAE
      Gulf
      MENA
      US
      UK
      Europe
      Asia
      Business
      Aviation
      Economy
      Energy
      Money
      Property
      Banking
      Markets
      Opinion
      Comment
      Editorial
      Obituaries
      Cartoon
      Feedback
      Future
      Science
      Space
      Technology
      Climate
      Environment
      Road to Net Zero
      Health
      Culture
      Art & Design
      Books
      Film & TV
      Music & On-stage
      Pop Culture
      Lifestyle
      Travel
      Fashion & Beauty
      Food
      Motoring
      Luxury
      Home & Garden
      Wellbeing
      Things to do
      Sport
      World Cup 2026
      Football
      Cricket
      F1
      Tennis
      Combat Sports
      Cycling
      N Logo
      News
      Business
      Opinion
      Future
      Climate
      Health
      Culture
      Lifestyle
      Sport
      World Cup 2026
      • My Profile
      • Saved articles
      • Newsletters
      • Sign out
      UserSign in
      • Register
      • Sign in

      Robert Matthews

      Contributor
      Location

      Articles

      Stephen Hawking lectures in June at Canada's University of Waterloo, where he holds a distinguished research chair.
      Stephen Hawking's insights are old hat to physicists, so why do they provoke such furious debate?

      Even before his latest best-seller hit the bookshops, the wheelchair-bound physicist had provoked worldwide debate about the deepest issues in science, philosophy and religion.

      ScienceSeptember 12, 2010
      A tigress and her 12-week-old cubs lounge in Nepal, where parks officials have used a maths formula to show that the country's tiger population was increasing.
      Counting the unseen

      A maths trick known as capture-recapture allows researchers to estimate the extent of unobservable phenomena, which can help save endangered species, protect abused children and even chase spies.

      ScienceAugust 29, 2010
      AD201010708149960AR
      When a heart attack is not for real

      Anyone who regularly reads research papers and the resulting media stories soon uncovers a shocking fact: that the journalists generally get the basic facts right. The concern often lies with the studies themselves.

      ScienceAugust 15, 2010
      The clockwork regularity with which planets revolve around a star seems to be the exception to the rule.
      When - and if - planets collide

      Scientists used to scoff at the idea that planets could wander free from a fixed orbit. Now they have learnt more, and nobody is laughing.

      ScienceAugust 01, 2010
      Terahertz images of tooth with an internal cavity. T-rays can determine the internal composition of objects as much as 20 metres away.
      T-ray technology, the waves of the future

      As the discovery of X-rays changed the world, terahertz rays pose the same potential, with implications for fields from medicine to the military.

      ScienceJuly 18, 2010
      Crop circles, like this one in Switzerland, still puzzle some scientists.
      Crop markings are still a puzzle in scientific circles

      Hoaxers, aliens, spinning vortices of air caused by weather fronts, ball lightning: here are plenty of theories about what causes crop circles.

      ScienceJune 20, 2010
      Ben Bernanke, the chairman of the US Federal Reserve, said economists must challenge an assumption at the heart of their profession - that wealth means happiness.
      The equation of money and happiness

      Economists are driven to quantify everything. But happiness frustrates their enduring effort to equate it with money.

      ScienceMay 23, 2010
      A decade hence, overcast skies may be the result of lasers at work.
      Cloudy with a chance of lasers

      A half-century since their creation, laser beams have shown dazzling versatility - and for their next trick they could bring rain to dry regions.

      ScienceMay 09, 2010
      A force older than humanity, the ash plume of Eyjafjallakokul emerges from an Icelandic glacier beneath the Northern Lights last week.
      Creator and destroyer

      Volcanoes have immense power to disrupt our lives - yet without volcanoes, we might not have lives to disrupt.

      ScienceApril 25, 2010
      The deepest image yet of the universe in near-infrared light taken in December, 2009, by the new Wide Field Camera 3 aboard the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope.
      Knocks from the universe next door

      A handful of astronomers believe something from beyond our universe is tugging at our galaxies - and new evidence supports their idea.

      ScienceApril 11, 2010
      What could possibly go wrong? Technicians conduct one of the many inspections of the Large Hadron Collider beneath the border of Switzerland and France.
      Collider hits the pedal at last

      After years of disappointment, delay and mishap, the world's most powerful particle accelerator, the Large Hadron Collider, is about to get down to business.

      ScienceMarch 28, 2010
      Manchester City fans celebrate a victory, which, according to the "wisdom of crowds" theory, could have been predicted based on the scattered opinions of the football-watching public.
      The truth about the wisdom of crowds

      A century later, economists and statisticians are still arguing over how scattered opinions of ordinary people can produce amazingly accurate insights.

      ScienceMarch 14, 2010
      In the cold light of day, people are becoming more sceptical about global warming. It has been particularly cold in Scotland which has experienced heavy snows in one of the worst winters for decades.
      Wind of change in weather debate

      Scientists are trying to combat growing scepticism over their global-warming predictions with a new generation of climate simulation computer models.

      ScienceFebruary 28, 2010
      Panic over a a possible swine flu pandemic brought an earnings bonanza for the pharmaceutical industry, but the prospects for finding new revenue-earning drugs are dim.
      Cure for ailing drug giants

      Billions of dollars are being spent on the search for new and better medicines - to remarkably little effect. Now some number-crunching has indicated out-of-the-box thinking may be required.

      ScienceFebruary 14, 2010
      Technicians inside the National Ignition Facility target chamber. At right is the target positioner, which holds the target fuel capsule.
      The power source of tomorrow (and tomorrow and tomorrow)

      under the microscope Scientists behind the huge National Ignition Facility laser in California believe it could provide a limitless source of safe energy.

      ScienceJanuary 30, 2010
      More Articles

      The National News Logo
      IPSO regulated

      News
      UAE
      Gulf
      MENA
      US
      UK
      Europe
      Asia
      Business
      Aviation
      Economy
      Energy
      Money
      Property
      Banking
      Markets
      Opinion
      Comment
      Editorial
      Obituaries
      Cartoon
      Feedback
      Future
      Science
      Space
      Technology
      Climate
      Environment
      Road to Net Zero
      Health
      Culture
      Art & Design
      Books
      Film & TV
      Music & On-stage
      Pop Culture
      Lifestyle
      Travel
      Fashion & Beauty
      Food
      Motoring
      Luxury
      Home & Garden
      Wellbeing
      Things to do
      Sport
      Football
      Cricket
      Olympics
      F1
      Tennis
      Combat Sports
      Cycling
      Weekend
      Living in the UAE
      TN Magazine
      Podcasts Newsletters Read E-Paper Print Subscriptions Video App
      About UsContact UsWork With UsAdvertise With UsTerms & ConditionsPrivacy PolicyCookie PolicySitemapArchiveRegistration FAQsRosalynn Carter Fellowship
      IPSO regulated
      Follow us
      Get news alerts from
      The National logo
      You can manage notifications at any time by clicking the notifications icon.