Opposites attract - but they may not stay together
Thursday, September 24, 2009 - 15:21
in Physics & Chemistry
Opposites may always attract. But they may not remain together long-term. In a counter-intuitive discovery published in the current edition of the journal Nature, researchers from Harvard, the University of California at Davis, Princeton, and Penn State University report that oppositely charged drops of water will not attract permanently, but instead will bounce off each other indefinitely when subjected to a force of attraction created by what physicists call an electric field that is too strong.read more
Read the whole article on Harvard Science
More from Harvard Science
Related
- UC Davis researchers identify dominant chemical that attracts mosquitoes to humansMon, 26 Oct 2009, 17:24:00 EDT
- Responsive local governments most attractive to young adultsMon, 15 Sep 2008, 13:43:02 EDT
- Being altruistic may make you attractiveTue, 14 Oct 2008, 14:08:38 EDT
- Restoring a natural root signal helps to fight a major corn pestMon, 3 Aug 2009, 18:36:00 EDT
- Scientists find facial scars increase attractivenessTue, 18 Nov 2008, 9:44:32 EST