Peter Weiss

All Stories by Peter Weiss

  1. Tech

    Fields of Beams: Carbon nanotubes crop up for big-screen TV

    Carbon nanotubes serve as the electron emitters that light up the screen of a new experimental, high-definition television display.

  2. Tech

    Morphing wheels for beginner bikers

    A new bike design for kids morphs from tricycle into bicycle as the rider gets moving, possibly easing the often-fearful starts at riding two-wheelers.

  3. Tech

    Nuke batteries get more practical

    Nuclear batteries that will last for decades may have moved closer to reality with the demonstration of a silicon chip riddled with radioactive, tritium-filled pits where radiation is efficiently converted to electricity.

  4. Physics

    Molecular Anatomy Revealed

    Using ever-faster lasers to zap the electron clouds in atoms and molecules, scientists are making major strides toward observing and controlling the elementary quantum transformations that underlie all of chemistry.

  5. Physics

    Quantum Bull’s-Eye: Particle-mass prediction hits the mark

    By precisely predicting the mass of a subatomic meson, physicists have demonstrated they have the computational know-how to calculate real-world details from quark basics.

  6. Tech

    In Its Own Image: Simple robot replicates itself block by block

    A robot made by stacking identical, cubelike modules has demonstrated that it can copy itself.

  7. Physics

    Galactic data shore up a constant

    Alpha, a constant of nature found to vary in some astrophysical studies, actually holds steady, according to the first survey of galaxies used to evaluate alpha's constancy.

  8. Physics

    Scales tilt against five-quark particles

    Studies that fail to find purported five-quark particles, or pentaquarks, are stacking up quicker than studies that claim to have found such particles, suggesting that they might not really exist.

  9. Physics

    Test puts pedal to heavy metal

    Stellar explosions forge heavy elements such as gold more quickly than scientists had predicted, as indicated by the first measurement of the half-life of a rare form of nickel that's a key link in the chain of element formation.

  10. Tech

    Radio-a-Wreck

    Radio transmitters broadcasting from imploding buildings are informing engineers about how such collapses disrupt radio communications and how rescuers might overcome those disruptions.

  11. Physics

    Extreme Matter: Mother of all material flows into view

    By making an extremely hot and dense state of matter that, surprisingly, is a liquid, physicists say they may have finally created a sample of matter much like the primordial stuff that permeated the newborn universe and gave rise to all other matter.

  12. Physics

    Built for Speed: Novel transistor design spurns limits

    The novel design of what's now the world's fastest transistor opens the possibility of even speedier devices that could operate as fast as a trillion cycles per second.