These accounts may be more fun than a Higgs Boson

Ok, science nerds.

Dr. Tyson is an astrophysicist, author, and recently the host of @COSMOSonTV, a space-time odyssey.

NASA

NASA / Twitter.com

you could’t talk about the best science X accounts without mentioning@NASA.

Neil deGrasse Tyson

Neil deGrasse Tyson / Twitter.com

They also sent the Hubble Space Telescope into orbit, which offers beautiful and detailed images of the universe.

Curiosity Rover explored Mars for 15 years before it finally died in February 2019.

Mars is far away, so Curiosity didn’t post on X a lot.

Curiosity Rover on Twitter

Curiosity Rover / Twitter.com

But there aren’t many other places to see up-close images of our neighboring planet.

Amy Mainzer

Amy Mainzer / Twitter.com

Scientist@AmyMainzerworks with the Jet Propulsion Laboratory at NASA.

In her X photo, she wears a Star Trek uniform.

Amy Mainzer on Twitter

Amy Mainzer / Twitter.com

That should tell you what you want to know about this science X account.

Tweets about meteorites, the universe, butterflies, and cactus adorn her feed.

The@JaneGoodallInstgives you the latest news on our closest human relatives.

Jane Goodall on Twitter

Jane Goodall / Twitter.com

Scientific American has been around since 1845 and their X account began in 2008.

That long history gives them plenty of diverse topics to Tweet about.

And with over one million followers, there’s no shortage of discussions to follow.

Whale at American Museum of Natural History

American Museum of Natural History / Twitter.com

Dr. Manaster is a biologist at the University of Illinois School of Integrative Biology.

@bug_gwenis an entomologist at the Purdue Bug Barn in “Low Earth Orbit, Indiana.”

Needless to say, this science X account is buggy.

Carolyn Porco on Twitter

Carolyn Porco / Twitter.com

Ok, sorry for the bad jokes.

There are many more science X accounts.

Some are lighthearted and some are the facts.

Joanne Manaster on Twitter

Joanne Manaster / Twitter.com

In any case, check out some of these and learn what’s going in the world of science.

Gwen Pearson

Gwen Pearson / Twitter.com

Katie Mack

Nerissa Escanlar / The New York Times