Latest science news in Physics & Chemistry

Observatory: Diesel, Made Simply From Coffee Grounds (Ah, the Exhaust Aroma)

15 years ago from NY Times Science

Scientists at the University of Nevada, Reno, have made diesel fuel from used coffee grounds.

What if dark matter particles aren't WIMPs?

15 years ago from Physorg

(PhysOrg.com) -- For years, many physicists have accepted that dark matter is composed of weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs). The fact that WIMPs can naturally explain the amount of dark...

Cheaper Plastic Solar Cells In the Works

15 years ago from Live Science

A lab is developing a solar cell that can absorb more of the sun’s energy for electricity production.

Researcher nabs 'doubly magic' tin isotope

15 years ago from Physorg

(PhysOrg.com) -- With help from newly developed equipment designed and built at Michigan State University, MSU researchers have been able to make first-of-its-kind measurements of several rare nuclei, one of...

Chemist Tames Longstanding Electron Computation Problem

15 years ago from Science Daily

For 50 years, theoretical chemists have puzzled over the problem of predicting many-electron chemistry with only two electrons, which many thought intractable and perhaps impossible to solve. One scientist will...

Wind, Water And Sun Beat Biofuels, Nuclear And Coal For Clean Energy

15 years ago from Science Daily

Biofuels, nuclear energy and coal are the worst choices for energy alternatives to petroleum products and wind, solar, geothermal, tides and waves are the best, according to results from the...

GM Plugs Its Chevy Volt Hybrid, but Will It Be Road-Ready In Time?

15 years ago from Scientific American

A single component will make or break Chevrolet's new Volt "extended-range electric vehicle"--and with it, potentially, the fate of America's largest carmaker, General Motors: its battery. It's no wonder then...

Pass on plastic bags and give the planet a helping hand

15 years ago from Physorg

What would you rather see in a tree? A couple of bald eagles or a plastic bag? OK, that's a stupid, no-brainer question. Plastic bags have become the scourge of...

Carbon Nanofibers Cut Flammability of Upholstered Furniture

15 years ago from Physorg

(PhysOrg.com) -- Carbon, the active ingredient in charcoal, is normally not considered a fire retardant, but researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology have determined that adding a...

Elpida Completes Development of New 50nm Process 2-Gigabit Mobile RAM

15 years ago from Physorg

Elpida Memory today announced that it had completed development of a 50nm process 2-gigabit Mobile RAM product using 50nm process technology with 193nm (ArF) immersion lithography and copper interconnect.

Researchers Observe Magnus Effect in Light for First Time

15 years ago from Physorg

(PhysOrg.com) -- Researchers at the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology have become the first to observe the Magnus effect in light, potentially opening a new avenue for controlling light in nanometer-scale...

Controlling the building blocks of life

15 years ago from Physorg

(PhysOrg.com) -- A simple and reliable method for converting one of the simplest chemical entities into one of the most difficult-to-make molecular building blocks of life, with complete control over...

Whatever Floats Your Boat

15 years ago from PopSci

Is it magic? Is that aluminum foil boat floating on air? Well, no and no. What we literally don't see is that the bottom of that aquarium is filled with...

Cell biology: Stretching the imagination

15 years ago from News @ Nature

Squash them, pinch them, twist them, pull them #20; cells react to physical forces, finds Claire Ainsworth.

Patent pledge to Indian universities

15 years ago from News @ Nature

Critics worry that push for technology transfer is moving too fast.

Muscle Cars Meet Green Technology

15 years ago from CBSNews - Science

When you're buying a car, you can go big or you can go green, right? Not according to one mechanic Hari Sreenivasan met. His vehicles combine raw power with the...

Intel to produce 32nm chips

15 years ago from Physorg

Intel Corp., the world's biggest computer chip-maker, said Wednesday that it has developed a manufacturing process that shrinks the circuitry in a chip to just 32 nanometers (nm). One nanometer...

New Polymer Coatings Prevent Corrosion, Even When Scratched

15 years ago from Science Daily

Imagine tiny cracks in your patio table healing by themselves, or the first small scratch on your new car disappearing by itself. This and more may be possible with self-healing...

Japan harnesses commuters' stamping for power

15 years ago from Physorg

Japan has found a way to harness clean energy from thousands of stamping feet that pass through one of its busiest train stations every day.

Black gold fever

15 years ago from BBC News: Science & Nature

Canada's giant oil sands industry faces testing times

The clear future of electronics

15 years ago from

A group of scientists at Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) has fabricated a working computer chip that is almost completely clear - the first of its kind....

Hidden Travels of the Atomic Bomb

15 years ago from NY Times Science

Atomic insiders say the weapon was invented only once, and its secrets were spread around the globe by spies, scientists and the covert acts of nuclear states.

Intelligent Vehicle Safety Systems Offer Considerable Potential For Improving Traffic Safety

15 years ago from Science Daily

Intelligent vehicle safety systems will clearly improve traffic safety if they are extensively taken into use. Many of the systems effectively reduce the number of fatalities and injuries, although without...

Lights, Camera, Render: Visualizing the Universe

15 years ago from Physorg

(PhysOrg.com) -- A red plume of hydrogen gas streams in three dimensions across a movie screen that almost spans the width of a dark conference room. Within the plume a...

Northeastern Physicist Recognized for Contributions to Interdisciplinary Science

15 years ago from Newswise - Scinews

Northeastern University physicist Albert-Laszlo Barabasi has once again been recognized for his outstanding contributions to science.

Nuclear engineering on the rise at McMaster

15 years ago from CBC: Technology & Science

Student interest in nuclear engineering has risen sharply in the past four years, says John Luxat, professor of engineering physics at McMaster University in Hamilton.

High Energy Physics Team Sets New Data-Transfer World Records

15 years ago from Physorg

(PhysOrg.com) -- Building on seven years of record-breaking developments, an international team of physicists, computer scientists, and network engineers led by the California Institute of Technology--with partners from Michigan, Florida,...

Arthur R. Kantrowitz, Whose Wide-Ranging Research Had Many Applications, Is Dead at 95

15 years ago from NY Times Health

Dr. Kantrowitz’s research on the behavior of superhot gases and fluid dynamics led to nose cones for rockets, heart-assist pumps and the idea of nuclear fusion in magnetic bottles.