Latest science news in Physics & Chemistry

Engineers Discover Nanoparticles Can Break On Through

17 years ago from Science Daily

In a finding that could speed the use of sensors or barcodes at the nanoscale, engineers have shown that certain types of tiny organic particles, when heated to the proper...

Special thread authenticates clothes

17 years ago from Science Alert

A new technology has been developed to detect fraud in the clothing industry – small quantities of a thread that can be scanned to prove that items are genuine.

New Carbon Material Shows Promise of Storing Large Quantities of Renewable Electrical Energy

17 years ago from Science Blog

Engineers and scientists at The University of Texas at Austin have achieved a breakthrough in the use of a one-atom thick structure called "graphene" as a new carbon-based material for...

Coating Improves Electrical Stimulation Therapy Used For Parkinson's, Depression, Chronic Pain

17 years ago from Science Daily

Researchers have designed a way to improve electrical stimulation of nerves by outfitting electrodes with the latest in chemically engineered fashion: a coating of basic black, formed from carbon nanotubes.

Improving Our Ability To Peek Inside Molecules

17 years ago from Science Daily

It's not easy to see a single molecule inside a living cell. Nevertheless, researchers are developing a new technique that will enable them to create detailed high-resolution images, giving scientists...

New Clues To Oxygen At The Origin Of The Solar System

17 years ago from Science Daily

Oxygen is the most abundant element on Earth, accounting for almost half the planet's mass. Of its three stable isotopes, oxygen 16 makes up 99.762 percent of oxygen on Earth,...

Earth Structure: Lowermost Mantle Has Materials With Unexpected Properties

17 years ago from Science Daily

Materials deep inside Earth have unexpected atomic properties that might force earth scientists to revise their models of Earth's internal processes. Recreating in the lab materials they believe exist in...

X-ray pulse seen in biggest holes

17 years ago from BBC News: Science & Nature

Scientists find what they say is a missing link between the behaviour of the smallest and biggest black holes

Feature: Glorious mud - a gold mine

17 years ago from Science Alert

Many don't know that for a new i-phone or state of the art flat screen to work, earth's atomic elements are needed. Resembling a lot of old mud to some,...

New technique sees into tissue at greater depth, resolution

17 years ago from Biology News Net

By coupling a kicked-up version of microscopy with miniscule particles of gold, Duke University scientists are now able to peer so deep into living tissue that they can see molecules...

Fullerene Traps Longest Metal-Metal Bond

17 years ago from C&EN

Terbium atoms held inside C79N cage share a single electron

IBM Develops Computational Scaling Solution for Next Generation '22nm' Semiconductors

17 years ago from Physorg

In response to ever increasing demands for smaller, more powerful and energy-efficient devices for cloud computing and high-performance servers, IBM today announced the semiconductor industry's first computationally based process for...

Turning Bacteria into Plastic Factories

17 years ago from Scientific American

Escherichia coli (E. coli) can give you a severe case of food poisoning or, with a little genetic engineering, a useful plastic. Scientists at San Diego–based Genomatica, Inc., have announced...

Next-generation nanofluidic devices near

17 years ago from UPI

CHAMPAIGN, Ill., Sept. 17 (UPI) -- U.S. scientists say they've moved closer to producing next-generation, ultra-efficient nanofluidic devices for drug delivery and nano-manufacturing.

Coating copies microscopic biological surfaces

17 years ago from Physorg

Someday, your car might have the metallic finish of some insects or the deep black of a butterfly's wing, and the reflectors might be patterned on the nanostructure of a...

Saint John looks at geothermal energy for city buildings

17 years ago from CBC: Technology & Science

A Nova Scotia company that specializes in geothermal technology wants to take over the heating and cooling systems in five municipal buildings in Saint John.

Error message! How mobile phones distort measurements

17 years ago from Physorg

Nowadays we don't only take measurements with simple measuring devices, but also with whole measuring systems. These are very complex and are completely set up from their component parts at...

Self-steering Vehicle Designed To Mimic Movements Of Ants

17 years ago from Science Daily

A team of engineers in the Canary Islands has designed the “Verdino”, a self-steering vehicle that can sense the road surface using a technique called Ant Colony Optimisation. This method...

Push is on to recycle tossed-aside cell phones

17 years ago from Physorg

Pity that old cell phone languishing in a drawer. It's missing out on a fascinating afterlife. Most discarded phones in the U.S. are simply forgotten amid household clutter. A smaller...

Cases: In a Place of Dying, Slight Shadows of Life

17 years ago from NY Times Science

Alzheimer’s closed in on a wife early, grindingly taking over more than half of our years together.

Berkeley Approves City-Backed Loans for Solar Panels

17 years ago from NY Times Science

The loans, offered to to property owners who install rooftop solar-power systems, would be paid off over 20 years as part of the owners’ property-tax bills.

Physicists urge U.S. to prioritize energy efficiency

17 years ago from Physorg

The U.S. can reduce its dependence on foreign oil and greenhouse gas emissions by making cars and buildings much more energy efficient, according to a study released Tuesday by a...

New manufacturing process represents next step in flexible, liquid crystal display technology

17 years ago from Physorg

Kent Displays Inc. (KDI), a Kent State University partner, yesterday took delivery of a roll-to-roll production line which enables the manufacture of flexible displays, representing a significant change in the...

A cautionary note in the use of carbon nanotubes as interconnects

17 years ago from Physorg

(PhysOrg.com) -- Researchers at the University of Surrey`s Advanced Technology Institute (UK) have used scanning tunnelling microscopy to confirm remarkable changes in the fundamental electronic behaviour when double-walled carbon nanotubes...

Proton spin puzzle is investigated

17 years ago from UPI

NEWPORT NEWS, Va., Sept. 16 (UPI) -- U.S. government physicists said they've demonstrated more than half of the spin of a proton is the result of the movement...

12th Annual Asia Power & Energy Congress

17 years ago from Science Alert

Extra: Grand Hyatt Location: Singapore Start Date: 30 March 3 April 2009 End Date: 3 April 2009 Category: Mining, Oil, Gas

Pentagon offers $1M for best power vest

17 years ago from UPI

WASHINGTON, Sept. 15 (UPI) -- The U.S. Defense Department said Monday it has come up with 48 finalists for its $1 million competition to develop a power vest...

Alternative Renewable Bio-Fuel Sources: Camelina Sativa and Switchgrass

17 years ago from Physorg

INEOS Enterprises of the UK has entered into a partnership agreement with Great Plains-The Camelina Company for the purpose of expanding their bio-diesel enterprises world-wide. Great Plains-The Camelina Company...