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- Study: Electric drive vehicles have little impact on US pollutant emissions
- Engineering new properties on ultra-thin nanomaterials: Tool opens door for design of new phases of materials
- Understanding the functioning of a new type of solar cell
- Bio-inspired robotic device could aid ankle-foot rehabilitation
- Training the brain using neurofeedback
- Seeing things: A new transparent display system could provide heads-up data
- Physicists quantify temperature changes in metal nanowires
- Baseball: Not safe at home
- Staying cool in the nanoelectric universe by getting hot
- Energy-dense sugar battery created
- Rosetta: 'Sleeping beauty' wakes up from deep space hibernation
- Radiation before surgery more than doubles mesothelioma survival
- Deciphering plants' electrical signals to devise new environmental biosensors
- First infrared satellite monitoring of peak pollution episodes in China
- Novel nanotherapy breakthrough may help reduce recurrent heart attacks, stroke
- Milky Way may have formed 'inside-out:' Gaia provides new insight into galactic evolution
- Island channel could power about half of Scotland, studies show
- Ultra-thin tool heating for injection molding
- Hydrocephalus: Sensors monitor cerebral pressure
- Peeking into Schrödinger's Box
- Double-layer capping solves two problems
- Lab-on-a-chip realizes potential
Study: Electric drive vehicles have little impact on US pollutant emissions Posted: 21 Jan 2014 11:38 AM PST A new study indicates that even a sharp increase in the use of electric drive passenger vehicles by 2050 would not significantly reduce emissions of high-profile air pollutants carbon dioxide, sulfur |
Posted: 21 Jan 2014 08:37 AM PST Physicists have engineered novel magnetic and electronic phases in the ultra-thin films of in a specific electronic magnetic material, opening the door for researchers to design new classes of |
Understanding the functioning of a new type of solar cell Posted: 21 Jan 2014 08:34 AM PST Scientists have uncovered the mechanism by which novel, revolutionary solar cells based on lead iodide perovskite light-absorbing semiconductor transfer electrons along their surface. The finding |
Bio-inspired robotic device could aid ankle-foot rehabilitation Posted: 21 Jan 2014 08:34 AM PST A soft, wearable device that mimics the muscles, tendons and ligaments of the lower leg could aid in the rehabilitation of patients with ankle-foot disorders such as drop foot, said a robotics |
Training the brain using neurofeedback Posted: 21 Jan 2014 08:34 AM PST A new brain-imaging technique enables people to "watch" their own brain activity in real time and to control or adjust function in predetermined brain regions. The study is the first to |
Seeing things: A new transparent display system could provide heads-up data Posted: 21 Jan 2014 08:34 AM PST Scientists have developed a new approach to produce transparent projection screens. Their result paves the way for a new class of transparent displays with many attractive features, including wide |
Physicists quantify temperature changes in metal nanowires Posted: 21 Jan 2014 08:33 AM PST Physicists have demonstrated the capability of measuring temperature changes in very small 3-D regions of |
Posted: 21 Jan 2014 08:33 AM PST Tag plays at home plate have the highest injury rate in professional baseball, occurring 4.3 times more often than other base-running plays, according to |
Staying cool in the nanoelectric universe by getting hot Posted: 21 Jan 2014 07:41 AM PST As smartphones, tablets and other gadgets become smaller and more sophisticated, the heat they generate while in use increases. This is a growing problem because it can cause the electronics inside |
Energy-dense sugar battery created Posted: 21 Jan 2014 06:30 AM PST A new sugar battery that could be on the market and powering the world's gadgets in three years has an energy density and order of magnitude higher than |
Rosetta: 'Sleeping beauty' wakes up from deep space hibernation Posted: 20 Jan 2014 08:11 AM PST It was a fairy-tale ending to a tense chapter in the story of the Rosetta space mission this evening as the European Space Agency heard from its distant spacecraft for the first time in 31 |
Radiation before surgery more than doubles mesothelioma survival Posted: 20 Jan 2014 02:32 PM PST Results of clinical research that treated mesothelioma with radiation before surgery show the three-year survival rate more than doubled for study participants afflicted with this deadly disease, |
Deciphering plants' electrical signals to devise new environmental biosensors Posted: 20 Jan 2014 08:47 AM PST Science is becoming closer emulating the fiction of a popular Avatar movie, by deciphering plants' electrical signals to devise new holistic environmental |
First infrared satellite monitoring of peak pollution episodes in China Posted: 20 Jan 2014 06:55 AM PST Plumes of several anthropogenic pollutants (especially particulate matter and carbon monoxide) located near ground level over China have for the first time been detected from space. The work was |
Novel nanotherapy breakthrough may help reduce recurrent heart attacks, stroke Posted: 20 Jan 2014 06:55 AM PST A new report shows that new statin nanotherapy can target high-risk inflammation inside heart arteries that causes heart attacks or |
Milky Way may have formed 'inside-out:' Gaia provides new insight into galactic evolution Posted: 20 Jan 2014 06:06 AM PST Research on first data release from Gaia-ESO project suggests the Milky Way formed by expanding out from the center, and reveals new insights into the way our Galaxy was |
Island channel could power about half of Scotland, studies show Posted: 20 Jan 2014 06:06 AM PST Renewable tidal energy sufficient to power about half of Scotland could be harnessed from a single stretch of water off the north coast of the Scotland, engineers |
Ultra-thin tool heating for injection molding Posted: 20 Jan 2014 06:04 AM PST In future, thin-film heating will allow plastic parts to be produced with greatly improved surface quality. Researchers have also found a way to make the whole process more energy |
Hydrocephalus: Sensors monitor cerebral pressure Posted: 20 Jan 2014 06:04 AM PST If the pressure in a patient's brain is too high, physicians implant a system in the head that regulates the pressure. A sensor can now measure and individually adjust brain pressure. The sensor |
Peeking into Schrödinger's Box Posted: 20 Jan 2014 05:50 AM PST Until recently, measuring a 27-dimensional quantum state would have been a time-consuming, multistage process using a technique called quantum tomography, which is similar to creating a 3D image from |
Double-layer capping solves two problems Posted: 18 Jan 2014 09:24 AM PST Using a newly developed technique, protective casings for microscale devices can be built quickly and cheaply without damaging |
Lab-on-a-chip realizes potential Posted: 18 Jan 2014 09:24 AM PST A portable instrument that replaces a full-size laboratory provides accurate multi-element analysis in less than a |
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