Graphene, a material as thin as a single atom yet stronger than steel, is reshaping multiple fields from medicine to clean water and now energy. Its unique properties—mechanical strength, electrical conductivity, chemical stability—are unlocking novel solutions across disciplines and enabling the emergence of next-generation infrastructure reliant on atomic-scale precision.
Beneath the mirror skies of Antarctica, where electromagnetic interference is at a minimum and the horizon is defined more by silence than light, something inexplicable has begun to whisper from the heart of the cosmos. Balloon-borne detectors operated by physicists scanning the frozen continent have intercepted strange, tau-type neutrinos approaching Earth from impossible angles.