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A Bulletin short fiction contest Announcing the Bulletin‘s new short fiction contest… Over the decades, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists has published the smartest minds in the fields it covers, ...
July 14-16 gathering to create recommendations for policymakers and leaders to reduce the threat of nuclear war ...
Setsuko Thurlow, who survived the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, Japan, in 1945, says we're walking through "a very dark time," ...
The UK will test its emergency alarm system for the first time in two years, as the Government warns Britain to prepare for ...
Eliminating the potential for Iran to hide behind a temporary truce or interim agreement—only to then surprise the world with ...
Those who keep up on current events know that talk of nuclear war continues today, and that’s why “Two Minutes to Midnight and the Architecture of Armageddon,” a new exhibit about the Doomsday Clock ...
When I asked John Savage, the retired co-founder of the Department of Computer Science at Brown University, what the ...
This series of articles examines why today’s nuclear landscape is more complicated and, in many ways, more precarious than ...
Seventy years ago, on September 17, 1955, a modified Convair B-36 departed Carswell Air Force Base in Texas. Legendary U.S.
The American reaction to an attack is classified, but details made public paint a harrowing picture.
Astronomers using the European Space Agency's Cheops mission have caught an exoplanet that seems to be triggering flares of ...
Silver-110’s decay reveals a promising path to measure antineutrino mass. New data could reshape future neutrino studies.