Latest science news in Physics & Chemistry

Caltech scientists create DNA tubes with programmable sizes for nanoscale manufacturing

15 years ago from Biology News Net

Scientists at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) have developed a simple process for mass producing molecular tubes of identical--and precisely programmable--circumferences. The technological feat may allow the use of...

Life Under The Laser: Unique Technology Illuminates Microscopic Activity In Body's Chemical Messenger System

15 years ago from Science Daily

Researchers have developed a unique technology that will allow scientists to look at microscopic activity within the body's chemical messenger system for the very first time, live as it happens.

Scientists take the sharpest image ever made with light

15 years ago from Physorg

(PhysOrg.com) -- A team of scientists from the Technische Universität Dresden (Germany) and the ESRF in Grenoble (France) has produced the image of an object at the highest resolution ever...

Can You Treat Composite Beams or Wings Mathematically like Isotropic Wings?

15 years ago from Science Blog

Finding the effective rigidities of an advanced composite wing can simplify the analysis considerably. The application of fibre-reinforced composite materials in the aerospace industry extends from commercial to military aircraft,...

Memory device could store data using heat

15 years ago from Physics World

Researchers develop a way of storing and reading information with phonons

Study says eyes evolved for X-Ray vision

15 years ago from Biology News Net

he eyes of some mammals have evolved to point in the same direction. While animals with forward facing eyes lose the ability to see what's behind them, they gain X-ray...

Interview: Finger on the pulse

15 years ago from Chemistry World

Paul Corkum talks to Hilary Crichton about attosecond pulses and how developing new ideas is like skiing downhill

Cracking down on counterfeit drugs

15 years ago from Chemistry World

A new Tamiflu screening method could help foil counterfeiters, say US scientists

Breaking the bonds of global warming

15 years ago from Chemistry World

Catalyst pulls apart unreactive carbon-fluorine bonds at room temperature

Single photon detectors for telecommunications wavelengths

15 years ago from Physorg

Practically speaking, single photon detection has not been something pursued very heavily at the wavelengths used for telecommunication signals. Part of the problem is that performance of single photon detectors...

Student-designed Device To Help Poor East Africans Coax Oil From Coconuts

15 years ago from Science Daily

Student engineers designed an innovative and cost-effective apparatus that enables poor East African women to turn abundant coconuts into valuable coconut oil.

Ceramic Material Revs Up Microwaving

15 years ago from Science Daily

Quicker microwave meals that use less energy may soon be possible with new ceramic microwave dishes and, according to the material scientists responsible, this same material could help with organic...

Ultra-energy Efficient Dryer Under Development

15 years ago from Science Daily

A total drying solution for the manufacturing industry which will make significant energy savings is currently under development.

Explosives Go 'Green' ... And Get More Precise

15 years ago from Science Daily

Certain explosives may soon get a little greener and a little more precise. Researchers have added unique green solvents (ionic liquids) to an explosive called TATB (1,3,5-triamino-2,4,6-trinitrobenzene) and improved the...

The benefit of the Cern experiments

15 years ago from The Guardian - Science

The collisions at Cern will benefit our understanding and the scientific profession itself, says Dan Bloom

Philips Research reveals ultra-thin backlight technology for TVs

15 years ago from Physorg

In the Future Zone of this year`s IFA trade fair in Berlin, Philips Research will demonstrate its thinnest 32`` liquid crystal display (LCD) prototype on show. With a 1mm light...

USC's 'print-a-house' construction technology

15 years ago from Physorg

Caterpillar, the world's largest manufacturer of construction equipment, is starting to support research on the "Contour Crafting" automated construction system that its creator believes will one day be able to...

Huffing and Puffing

15 years ago from PopSci

In London, Ontario, a team from the University of Western Ontario is bringing a fairy tale to life at the Insurance Research Lab for Better Homes. They don't have a...

Magnetism and Superconductivity Observed to Exist in Harmony

15 years ago from Physorg

(Physorg.com) -- Physicists at Los Alamos National Laboratory, along with colleagues at institutions in Switzerland and Canada, have observed, for the first time in a single exotic phase, a situation...

Camera Iris Mechanism Saves Bacteria

15 years ago from C&EN

Complementary approaches capture ion channel in its open form

The hunt for the Higgs steps up a gear

15 years ago from Physorg

The hunt for the Higgs boson, the most highly sought-after particle in physics, received a boost this month with the release of two new results from the Tevatron particle collider...

New Sony Cyber-Shot T500 Camera's Video Capture Goes High Def

15 years ago from Physorg

Sony is adding high-definition movie recording to its digital camera line with the introduction of the Cyber-shot DSC-T500 model.

Making a Solar Cell Component without Using Fossil Fuels

15 years ago from Scientific American

Solar energy is touted by some as the solution to the world's energy woes. But the process of making the various components requires fossil fuels, both for power and for...

The 2003 Northeast Blackout--Five Years Later

15 years ago from Scientific American

On August 14, 2003, shortly after 2 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, a high-voltage power line in northern Ohio brushed against some overgrown trees and shut down--a fault, as it's known...

Could Next-Gen Cell Phones Interrupt a Football Game?

15 years ago from Scientific American

It's fourth and goal and the home team's football quarterback can't get through to his coach on the sideline; the cast of a Broadway musical goes silent mid-show; a television...

Drilling for Hot Rocks: Google Sinks Cash into Advanced Geothermal Technology

15 years ago from Scientific American

For $1 billion over the next 40 years, the U.S. could develop 100 gigawatts (a gigawatt equals one billion watts) of electricity generation that emits no air pollution and pumps...

Immaterial display allows viewers to handle 3D images in air

15 years ago from Physorg

(PhysOrg.com) -- In the future of immersive entertainment, people may not only walk through floating 3D images, but also manipulate the images in thin air. Taking a step toward this...

'Single-Crystal' Superconductors are a Big Step for the Field

15 years ago from Physorg

In key advances for the field of superconductivity, a research group has created versions of a class of widely studied superconducting compounds that are each one continuous crystal, rather than...