Latest science news in Physics & Chemistry

Perfect Night Vision? New Superlattice Structure Enables High Performance Infrared Imaging

16 years ago from Science Daily

Scientists have demonstrated for the first time a high-performance infrared imager, based on a Type II superlattice, which looks at wavelengths 20 times longer than visible light. The technology has...

Magnetic Nanoparticles: Suitable For Cancer Therapy?

16 years ago from Science Daily

A new measuring procedure can help to investigate in some detail the behavior of magnetic nanoparticles which are used for cancer therapy.

Tiny Particles Solve Big Problems

16 years ago from Physorg

Cutting edge nanotechnology research at North Carolina State University is leading to advances in everything from revitalizing HIV drugs to creating harder, stronger nanocrystalline iron that can really take the...

Scientists in Japan Design First Optical Pacemaker for Laboratory Research

16 years ago from Newswise - Scinews

The world's first optical pacemaker is described in an article published today in Optics Express, the Optical Society's open-access journal. A team of scientists at Osaka University in Japan show...

High Throughput Microscopy Quantifies Regulation Of Estrogen Receptor

16 years ago from Science Daily

High throughput microscopy that uses robots and special microscopes and techniques to generate thousands of images of a cell in a short time enabled researchers to describe how the genetic...

Biofuels: Fungus Use Improves Corn-to-ethanol Process

16 years ago from Science Daily

Scientists are developing a process that cleans up and improves the dry-grind ethanol production process. The process uses fungus to reduce energy costs, allow more water recycling and improve a...

Carbon Nanoribbons Could Make Smaller, Speedier Computer Chips

16 years ago from Science Daily

Stanford chemists have developed a new way to make transistors out of carbon nanoribbons. The devices could someday be integrated into high-performance computer chips to increase their speed and generate...

Ex-adviser backs nuclear increase

16 years ago from BBC News: Science & Nature

Expanding nuclear power capacity would help meet demands caused by electric cars, a leading scientist says.

Water Used To Make Complicated Chain Of Chemical Reactions For Plastics And Medicines Much More Environmentally Friendly

16 years ago from Science Daily

Chemists unlock water's potential for the new "green chemistry" movement. Researchers have discovered a way to use water to make certain steps of a complicated chain of chemical reactions more...

New Unifying Theory Of Lasers Advanced By Physicists

16 years ago from Science Daily

Researchers have formulated a theory that, allows scientists to better understand and predict the properties of both conventional and nonconventional lasers, according to a recent article in Science.

Physicists Don't Flip Spin but Find Possible Electron Switch

16 years ago from Physorg

University of Oregon researchers trying to flip the spin of electrons with laser bursts lasting picoseconds (a trillionth of a second) instead found a way to manipulate and control the...

U.S. cable providers move to ditch set-top boxes

16 years ago from CBC: Technology & Science

Sony Electronics Inc. and six of the biggest U.S. cable companies have agreed to eliminate set-top boxes with a new design that would be built into the television sets themselves.

Pisa's leaning tower safe for 300 years

16 years ago from MSNBC: Science

The leaning tower of Pisa has been successfully stabilized and is out of danger for at least 300 years, said an engineer who has been monitoring the iconic Italian tourist...

Method Uses 'Bluetooth' To Track Travel Time For Vehicles, Pedestrians

16 years ago from Science Daily

Engineers have created a method that uses pervasive Bluetooth signals from cell phones and other wireless devices to constantly update how long it takes vehicles and pedestrians to travel from...

Large Hadron Collider Enables Hunt For 'God' Particle To Complete 'Theory Of Everything'

16 years ago from Science Daily

When the world's most powerful subatomic particle collider begins gathering data this summer, it will be a major milestone for a number of University of Washington scientists. UW physicists and...

Nortel to close Calgary operations

16 years ago from CBC: Technology & Science

Telecommunications equipment-maker Nortel Networks is closing down its operations in Calgary by 2009, the company said Tuesday.

Nuclear clean-up costs 'to soar'

16 years ago from BBC News: Science & Nature

The cost of decommissioning the UK's ageing nuclear facilities is set to rise above £73bn, the BBC learns.

Quantum dots that produce white light

16 years ago from Science Blog

Take an LED that produces intense, blue light. Coat it with a thin layer of special microscopic beads called quantum dots. And you have what could become the successor to...

Cornell receives federal grants to create fabrics to render toxic chemicals harmless

16 years ago from Physorg

Cornell fiber scientist Juan Hinestroza is working with the U.S. government to create fabrics made of functional nanofibers that would decompose toxic industrial chemicals into harmless byproducts.

Looking at methane sources in the right light

16 years ago from Physorg

Plants store one greenhouse gas, but emit another. Whereas they bind carbon dioxide, they release methane - albeit in small quantities. This has now been confirmed by scientists from the...

Superconductor in inertial fusion targets

16 years ago from Science Blog

Inertial fusion tries to make the fusion of deuterium and tritium by implosion of a target irradiated with lasers. This implosion is obtained in an indirect way by the expansion...

Titanium doors to increase soldier safety

16 years ago from UPI

OAK RIDGE, Tenn., May 27 (UPI) -- U.S. government scientists say the next generation of combat vehicles will be equipped with titanium alloy doors to provide increased safety...

Scientists create new nanotube structures

16 years ago from Physorg

Thanks to the rising trend toward miniaturization, carbon nanotubes - which are about 100,000 times thinner than a human hair and possess several unique and very useful properties ...

Physicist Claims First Real Demonstration of Cold Fusion

16 years ago from Physorg

To many people, cold fusion sounds too good to be true. The idea is that, by creating nuclear fusion at room temperature, researchers can generate a nearly unlimited source of...

Feature: How oil and gas technology is helping Australia’s Olympic Swimming Team

16 years ago from Science Alert

A technology used to improve flows of oil and gas through pipelines may help elite swimmers win Olympic gold, reports Marcia Van Zeller.

Ottawa firm's shiny solar technology wins Wal-Mart contract

16 years ago from CBC: Technology & Science

A little company in Stittsville, Ont., has a contract with the biggest retailer in the world to test and demonstrate its powers of concentration - of the sun's energy.

Bright Sparks Make Gains Towards Plastic Lasers Of The Future

16 years ago from Science Daily

Researchers have come one step closer to finding the 'holy grail' in the field of plastic semiconductors by demonstrating a class of material that could make electrically-driven plastic laser diodes...

Wireless spectrum: FAQs

16 years ago from CBC: Technology & Science

The government's auction of wireless airwaves begins on May 27 and several new cellphone providers are expected as a result.