Physics
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Earth
Goo gives eels just the right buoyancy
Scientists survey the specific gravity of 25 marine critters.
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Materials Science
Cornering the Terahertz Gap
Controlling light’s path could enable invisibility or harness an intriguing but so far elusive stretch of the spectrum.
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Chemistry
Light could heal materials
Scientists have created a new material that repairs itself when exposed to ultraviolet light.
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Physics
Single top quark detected
Scientists observe elusive single top quark, usually found in pairs.
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Physics
When the ink hits the page
Scientists investigate the physics of the most printable ink and find the most viscous inks don’t make the grade.
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Physics
Black hole constant makes unexpected appearance
A mathematical constant that emerges only in the unusual conditions of specific black hole systems has shown up in a simple Newtonian system.
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Physics
Science Stimulus
Researchers look to the new administration to bring fresh perspectives to health, energy, climate policy and science funding.
By Janet Raloff -
Climate
Obama’s budget would boost science
Featured blog: Here's a preview of what science programs the Obama administration plans to push in the coming year's federal budget.
By Janet Raloff -
Humans
DOE wants to become more like Bell Labs
Steven Chus prizes DOE's research prowess, but not it's ability to marshall its discoveries into marketable innovations.
By Janet Raloff -
Physics
Physics could unite plankton
Oceanic version of wind shear can disorient marine microorganisms and trigger formation of thin, densely populated layers.
By Sid Perkins -
Earth
AAAS: Climate-friendly dining … meats
The carbon footprints of raising livestock for food.
By Janet Raloff -
Chemistry
Supergoo Erases ‘Monument-al’ Nuclear Fallout
From disposable diapers comes a technology that can be used to extract radionuclides off of the porous surfaces of buildings.
By Janet Raloff