- Is eating raw eggs beneficial or harmful?

Chicken eggs are one of the healthy foods that contain many healthy nutrients. Many people often have a preference to eat or drink raw or rare eggs. So is it good to eat raw eggs?
- Using a laser transmits data at a rate of 1,000 gigabits per second at a distance of 53 km

Researchers at ETH Zurich University collaborated with Thales Alenia Space and the French National Aeronautics and Space Research Agency (ONERA) to conduct an experiment using a
- The world's deepest sunken shipwrecks ever discovered

The famous Titanic sank in 1912 at a depth of about 3,810 meters, more than twice the depth of the Grand Canyon in the US and five times the height of the tallest building in the
- Amazing facts about the deepest place on Earth, the Challenger abyss

At about 11,000 meters below sea level, the Challenger abyss is the deepest known point on Earth's surface.
- NASA recycles urine and sweat of crew on ISS space station 98%

Astronauts aboard the International Space Station (ISS) have just achieved a 98% recovery rate by … effectively recycling their urine.
- Houses are so heavy that the whole city sinks

Under the enormous weight of New York's iconic skyscrapers, the city seems to be sinking a little deeper into the Earth each year.
- 5 most powerful nuclear bombs in the world ever built

Here are the 5 most terrible nuclear bombs ever built according to Auto Journalism.
- Hydroelectric dam with capacity 3 times larger than the Three Gorges Dam is about to be built

China announced plans to build a huge hydroelectric project on the Yarlung Tsangpo River two years ago, which is part of the Brahmaputra River in India.
- Popular dragonflies in Vietnam

Dragonflies are common and familiar insects to many Vietnamese, especially in rural areas.
- The otters 'invited each other' to the shore to watch the iguanas fight

A man named Vincent Yip shared a video of a clash between two giant iguanas. However, what makes the video attractive to viewers is the flock of more than a dozen otters swimming
- What's underneath the desert sand?

Deserts with endless stretches of white sand dunes are familiar images to us. So, what's underneath that desert sand?
- Strange hunting skills: Cuttlefish hypnotize sea crabs to eat meat

Video captures the scene of the white-veined cuttlefish (Sepia latimanus) using a unique sea crab hunting strategy in Indonesian waters, making the cinematographer extremely
- Why is popcorn sold in every movie theater?

There are many dishes, but movie theaters sell only popcorn, in addition to some carbonated drinks. Why is that?
- Leopards make a melancholy jump to catch monkeys in the opposite tree

Video captures a leopard jumping from tree branch to branch with a distance of several meters to catch a monkey running away.
- Which country is roundest in the world, shaped like a rectangle in the world?

Australian statistician David Barry recently carried out a project to compare so-called 'rectangles of countries'.
- Why do storms around the world often have women's names?

Storms in the northwest Pacific and South China Sea are named alternately from the list of countries proposed in the region, while around the world, storms often have women's
- Giant centipedes catch bats in the cave

In the video, the Amazon giant centipede - the largest centipede in the world, crawls to the ceiling of the cave and uses powerful venom to catch bats flying by.
- The first aircraft black box connected online to the ground

Honeywell Technology Solutions (HTS) in cooperation with the US corporation Curtiss-Wright has successfully developed the world's first aircraft black box that can be connected
- What if hurricanes disappeared from Earth?

When a storm occurs, it often brings heavy rain and strong winds, leading to difficulties in movement, flooding, etc., which can have severe consequences. Therefore, it can be said
- Development of a drug that helps teeth grow back many times

Scientists at Kitano Hospital Medical Research Institute in Osaka, Japan are developing a new drug capable of triggering the mechanism that causes teeth to regrow.