Latest science news in Physics & Chemistry

Phoenix tries shake and sprinkle

16 years ago from BBC News: Science & Nature

The Phoenix lander tries different ways of making clumpy Martian soil samples enter its onboard lab ovens.

Huge Space Lab Gets Even Bigger

16 years ago from CBSNews - Science

Astronauts attached an attic to the space station's Japanese lab for extra storage.

Monkeys Control a Robot Arm With Their Thoughts

16 years ago from NY Times Health

The report in the journal Nature is the most striking demonstration of brain-machine interface technology.

Researchers Aim To Mitigate Impact Of Unintended Hydrogen Leaks By Examining 'Embrittlement' Issues

16 years ago from Science Daily

Materials researchers across the globe have fervently been working to find the ideal hydrogen storage material, one that will safely and efficiently provide the needed range and running time for...

New films can reveal traces of explosives

16 years ago from UPI

SAN DIEGO, May 27 (UPI) -- U.S. chemists say new spray-on polymer films they've developed might become the basis of portable devices that can spot nitrogen-based explosives.

'Avalanche Effect' In Solar Cells Demonstrated

16 years ago from Science Daily

Researchers have found irrefutable proof that the so-called avalanche effect by electrons occurs in specific, very small semiconducting crystals. This physical effect could pave the way for cheap, high-output solar...

New System Which Eliminates Carbon Dioxide Emissions Through Microalgae Under Development

16 years ago from Science Daily

Scientists are carrying out a research project on the development of new systems to eliminate carbon dioxide emissions through the use of microalgae photosynthetic activity. The mechanism developed is simple...

Scalable wind turbine might fit on your roof

16 years ago from Physorg

When you think of wind power, you probably picture gigantic wind turbines spinning gracefully in the middle of large open areas.

Light-driven 'Molecular Brakes' Provide Stopping Power For Nanomachines

16 years ago from Science Daily

Researchers in Taiwan report development of a new type of "molecular brake" that could provide on-demand stopping power for futuristic nanomachines. The brake, thousands of times smaller than the width...

Next-generation Explosives: More Power And Safety Without The Pollution

16 years ago from Science Daily

Scientists in Germany are reporting development of a new generation of explosives that is more powerful than TNT and other existing explosives, less apt to detonate accidentally, and produce fewer...

Rice In Your Gas Tank: Boosting Biofuel Production From Rice Straw

16 years ago from Science Daily

Researchers in China are reporting a discovery that could turn rice straw into an inexpensive new renewable source of biofuel. Their new study describes a way to boost production of...

Feature: ‘Flick the switch to renewable energy’

16 years ago from Science Alert

Australia's solar energy industry might have received a big setback in the recent federal budget, but calls are mounting for the adoption of laws that will encourage more people to...

Scientists image a single HIV particle being born

16 years ago from Biology News Net

A mapmaker and a mathematician may seem like an unlikely duo, but together they worked out a way to measure longitude – and kept millions of sailors from getting lost...

Wind Farm May be on the Way for Sandia, Kirtland Air Force Base

16 years ago from Newswise - Scinews

Sandia National Laboratories and Kirtland Air Force Base may soon share a wind farm that will provide as much as one-third of the electricity used by the two entities.

Swiss supercollider puts U.S. on sidelines

16 years ago from UPI

DALLAS, May 25 (UPI) -- As the Swiss prepare to unveil a powerful particle accelerator, the United States finds itself in the "minor leagues" of particle physics, scientists...

Letters: Lack of action on climate change is criminal

16 years ago from The Guardian - Science

Letters: How much simpler a transition to a zero-carbon economy would be if we planned for it with foresight and determination

Uranium Producer Warns of Lake Ontario Pollution

16 years ago from NY Times Science

Cameco, the world’s largest uranium producer, has told the Canadian nuclear regulator that its refinery might have leaked uranium, arsenic and fluorides into Lake Ontario.

No curbs on lawyers, Cameron inquiry tells N.L.

16 years ago from CBC: Health

The judge running Newfoundland and Labrador's breast cancer inquiry has dismissed a government application on what inquiry lawyers can ask.

Artist’s X-ray images seek beauty underneath

16 years ago from MSNBC: Science

X-rays – they’re not just for doctors’ offices and airport security anymore. At least, not for British artist Nick Veasey. From tulips to tennis playing skeletons, laptops to a Boeing...

Letter: Nanotube study and cross-border science

16 years ago from The Guardian - Science

Letters: Your article is a good example of the payback from international collaboration in the areas of emerging technology

New grants to create fabrics that 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.

"Telectroscope" Connects London, NYC

16 years ago from CBSNews - Science

New Yorkers could see their English cousins across the pond without benefit of cable TV or video conferencing, courtesy of an unusual live optical hookup created by a conceptual artist...

Researchers Aim to Mitigate Impact of Unintended Hydrogen Leaks by Examining 'Embrittlement' Issues

16 years ago from Newswise - Scinews

Materials researchers across the globe have fervently been working to find the ideal hydrogen storage material, one that will safely and efficiently provide the needed range and running time for...

Bright sparks make gains towards plastic lasers of the future

16 years ago from Physorg

Imperial 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...

Chaotic Lasers Tamed

16 years ago from Science Daily

"Classical" laser light has become part of everyday life. There is a laser in every CD player, lecturers point to their slides with laser pointers and surgeons carry out medical...

Electron Traps That Compute

16 years ago from Science Daily

Physicists have used a semiconductor material to create superimposed quantum dots that "trap" single electrons. Not only can these dots be studied with lasers, their energy can be influenced as...

Technology entrepreneurs head for 'startup camp'

16 years ago from Physorg

Backpack-toting dreamers from more than 600 startup firms spent a recent morning at an Internet-age version of summer camp brainstorming about new online waves and how to ride them to...

Italy to reverse policy and build nuclear power stations: minister

16 years ago from Physorg

The Italian government said Thursday it would begin building nuclear power stations, reversing a 20-year ban in an initiative likely to spark strong resistance and take a long time to...