Physics

  1. Physics

    Stradivari’s secrets

    Three-dimensional imaging of a classic violin's vibrations explains the instrument's superior ability to direct sound to the audience.

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  2. Materials Science

    Needling Cells: Stem cells could take their cues from silicon nanowires

    Scientists have grown mouse stem cells on a bed of silicon nano-needles, hoping that they will be able to guide the cells' development through electrical stimulation.

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  3. Materials Science

    Heal thyself—again and again

    A new self-healing material can repeatedly repair damage at the same spot.

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  4. Physics

    Magnetic Logic: Electron spins could do cool calculations

    Novel circuits use electrons as tiny bar magnets to process information.

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  5. Physics

    Carbon’s mysterious magnetism

    An X-ray experiment has yielded the most conclusive evidence to date that carbon can be magnetic.

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  6. Physics

    The dance of the electron spins

    Physicists have used a novel measuring technique to track the motions of electron spins in a tiny magnet as its polarity flips, with north and south poles changing places.

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  7. Physics

    Broadband vision

    Cells that act like optical fibers could explain why vertebrate retinas have sharp vision despite being mounted backwards.

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  8. Physics

    Spinning into Control

    High-speed flywheels could replace batteries in hybrid vehicles and help make the electrical grid more reliable.

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  9. Physics

    Invisible Trail: Analyzing the vortices in the wake of a bat

    Flying bat generate lift and thrust with their wings much differently than birds do.

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  10. Physics

    Degrees of Quantumness: Shades of gray in particle-wave duality

    Light can be made to act as if it's composed of particles, waves, or something in between.

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  11. Physics

    The Hunt for Antihelium

    Scientists have been searching about 30 years for a single nucleus of helium made from antimatter, and although the discovery would imply that whole antimatter galaxies exist, the researchers' time could be running out.

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  12. Physics

    Quantum Loophole: Some quirks of physics can be good for science

    Physicists have found a way to almost double measurement precision when using photons to gauge distances.

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