Peter Weiss

All Stories by Peter Weiss

  1. Tech

    Open Sesame: Portable devices may achieve magnetic resonance views

    Top-notch magnetic resonance sensing now found only in hospitals and chemical labs may become available in portable devices, thanks to a new type of magnetic sensor.

  2. Physics

    Lone protein molecule could tip this scale

    A scale-on-a-chip capable of weighing individual, biologically active proteins took a step closer to reality as a minuscule, vibrating bridge detected the mass of a mere 30 xenon atoms.

  3. Physics

    Tense encounters drive a nanomotor

    Exploiting the relative strength of surface tension forces in the world of tiny objects, a novel type of nanomotor creates a powerful thrust each time molten metal droplets merge.

  4. Health & Medicine

    Detecting cancer in a flash

    Instant identification of cancer cells may become possible following experiments demonstrating that healthy and cancerous cells alter laser light in different, and distinguishable, ways.

  5. Physics

    Pinstripe Electricity: Novel fuel cell relies on thin, aqueous streams

    A promising new type of fuel cell exploits microstreams of water, which behave like flows of gooey honey.

  6. Physics

    Light’s Hidden Holdup: Reflected laser beams loiter a little

    Using an ultrashort pulse laser, physicists have measured a minuscule time delay that affects light reflecting off many surfaces.

  7. Tech

    Silicon chips land a lasting laser

    The first microchip-size silicon lasers promise to boost the maximum speeds of ordinary computers and electronic gadgets.

  8. Tech

    Remembering, on the cheap

    A new type of cheap plastic memory bit that stays set even when electrical power is off could facilitate the spread of flexible, radio-equipped tags as price tags, identity labels, and surveillance sensors.

  9. Physics

    Primordial Nukes

    The rocky remains of nuclear reactors that formed spontaneously in African uranium deposits 2 billion years ago are yielding striking new details about their operation as well as signs that a fundamental aspect of the universe may have once been stronger than it is today.

  10. Physics

    Brutal Bubbles: Collapsing orbs rip apart atoms

    Spikes of heat and pressure in sonoluminescence caused by the implosions of light-emitting bubbles in liquids can strip atoms of electrons.

  11. Physics

    Electronic Soup: Molecules in acid broth act as circuit parts

    An electronically promising molecule functions well in acid as a tiny amplifier, underscoring the importance of controlling molecules' electrochemical environments to achieve predictable performance.

  12. Physics

    A quantum fluid pipes up

    After 40 years of trying, physicists have heard a quantum-mechanical whistle emanating from two reservoirs of oscillating liquid helium separated by a perforated membrane.