NASA spacecraft begins collecting lunar atmosphere data
(Phys.org) —NASA's Lunar Atmosphere and Dust Environment Explorer (LADEE) is ready to begin collecting science data about the moon.
View ArticleCondom mechanics of graphene
Wonder material graphene faces its stiffest challenge yet – providing thinner, stronger, safer and more desirable condoms.
View ArticleMalaria in 3-D: Advanced imaging aids study of cell movement
Along with being the hottest thing at the local multiplex, 3-D imaging has entered the laboratory as an important research tool.
View ArticleBreakthrough adds a new dimension to printing (w/ Video)
(Phys.org) —Mechanical and Materials Engineering professor Jun Yang said there's a Chinese saying that "people cannot use a basket to draw water."
View ArticleResearch highlights urgency of reducing carbon dioxide emissions
(Phys.org) —Just-published research from Victoria University of Wellington and the University of Oxford highlights the urgency of reducing global emissions of carbon dioxide.
View ArticlePre-industrial rise in methane gas had natural and anthropogenic causes
(Phys.org) —For years scientists have intensely argued over whether increases of potent methane gas concentrations in the atmosphere – from about 5,000 years ago to the start of the industrial...
View ArticleResearch team discovers "immune gene" in Neanderthals
A research group at Bonn University, Germany, and international collaborators discovered a novel receptor, which allows the immune system of modern humans to recognize dangerous invaders, and...
View ArticleQuantum dots make efficient decisions
Even the simplest forms of life face an endless barrage of decisions—where to search for sustenance, for example, or how to avoid predators. Various mathematical models can mimic these decision-making...
View ArticleTeam finds one of civilization's oldest wine cellars
A team of American and Israeli researchers has unearthed what could be the largest and oldest wine cellar in the Near East.
View ArticleA new multilayer-based grating for hard X-ray grating interferometry
(Phys.org) —A new kind of x-ray multilayer grating that could open a pathway for high-sensitivity, hard x-ray phase contrast full-field imaging of large samples has been developed by researchers at the...
View ArticleYour house is full of space dust – it reveals the solar system's story
When you clean your house you are probably vacuuming up space dust. Not kidding. It is the same dust that was once part of comets and asteroids. You see that dust in the faint glow it helps create...
View Article'Smart' medical material aims to unfurl at 98.6 degrees
(Phys.org) —Mechanical Engineering Professor Lih-Sheng (Tom) Turng has a simple office demonstration of how shape-memory polymers work. He takes the material, which is formed into a compact flower bud,...
View ArticleSuspected dust ring in Venus's orbit confirmed
(Phys.org) —A trio of researchers from The Open University and the University of Central Lancashire in the U.K., has confirmed that a ring of dust surrounds the sun in the orbit of Venus. In their...
View ArticlePhysicists find doubly transient chaos can emerge due to dissipation
(Phys.org) —A team of researchers, one from the U.S. and the others from Hungary, has found that a condition they've dubbed doubly transient chaos can emerge from a system due to dissipation. In their...
View ArticleCopper nanowires offer an efficient, inexpensive approach to solar energy...
Copper adorns the Statue of Liberty, makes sturdy, affordable wiring, and helps our bodies absorb iron. Now, researchers at Duke University would like to use copper to transform sunlight and water into...
View ArticleWeb inventor: Surveillance threatens democracy (Update)
The scientist credited with inventing the World Wide Web spoke out Friday against what he called a "growing tide of surveillance and censorship," warning that it is threatening the future of democracy.
View ArticleKateeva announces YIELDjet—technique for printing OLEDs cheaper
(Phys.org) —A silicon valley based company called Kateeva has announced that it has developed a printing technique for mass production of OLED displays that is far cheaper that that used currently by...
View ArticleIn plant photosynthesis, scientists see clues for improving solar energy cells
Solar cells optimized to suit local light conditions, or made more efficient by using a broader part of the solar spectrum, are among the imaginative applications foreseen from ground-breaking new...
View ArticleAn inside look at metal-organic framework in action
(Phys.org) —A unique inside look at the electronic structure of a highly touted metal-organic framework (MOF) as it is adsorbing carbon dioxide gas should help in the design of new and improved MOFs...
View ArticleNew microscope captures movements of atoms and molecules
A new microscope invented at Michigan State University allows scientists to zoom in on the movements of atoms and molecules.
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