Physics

  1. Physics

    Electromagnetism could ease the flow in oil pipelines

    A few minutes of exposure to a magnetic or electric field sharply reduces crude oil's viscosity for hours at a time.

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  2. Physics

    Vanishing Actor: Physicists unveil first invisibility cloak

    The first functional invisibility cloak, which operates at microwave frequencies, has emerged from the laboratory.

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  3. Physics

    Fit to Be Tied

    Two new books present scathing critiques of string theory, which holds that the universe has 11 dimensions and that its fundamental building blocks are ultratiny loops of energy known as strings.

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  4. Physics

    Hawking at CERN

    Physicist Stephen Hawking visited the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) in late September 2006. The CERN Web site offers a glimpse of Hawking’s visit and video of two lectures that he presented, one for a general audience on the origin of the universe and the other for a specialist audience on the “semi-classical birth […]

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  5. Materials Science

    A nanotechnology report card

    Research on how nanotechnology affects human health and the environment must be expanded, a National Research Council report concludes.

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  6. Physics

    Hot Stuff: A usually ultracold, odd state forms when warm

    An exotic quantum state that had previously appeared only under conditions of astonishing cold has made its room-temperature debut.

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  7. Materials Science

    Rice-straw sweaters

    Textile scientists have for the first time extracted from rice straw natural cellulose fibers that can be spun into yarn.

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  8. Physics

    Solid Surprise: High-pressure oxygen takes unpredicted form

    X-ray analysis of oxygen crystals under high pressure indicated that the substance's two-atom molecules aggregate into groups of four, a crystalline structure that has never been seen before and isn't predicted by current quantum theory.

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  9. Physics

    Neutrino Detector

    Neutrinos are remarkably elusive subatomic particles, and it takes specially designed and constructed detectors to ensnare them. One such detector is the Soudan Underground Laboratory, built 2,400 feet underground in an old mine in Minnesota. The lab’s Web site offers descriptions of the facilities and updates on ongoing experiments. It also has a section for […]

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  10. Physics

    Radiant plasma may combat cavities

    Dentists may someday disinfect teeth with a newly demonstrated, handheld stylus that exudes glowing plasma deadly to cavity-causing bacteria.

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  11. Materials Science

    Logos to Go: Hydrogel coatings provide removable color

    A biodegradable coating could add a temporary splash of color to sports fields, buildings, or even people's bodies.

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  12. Physics

    On-chip lamp scores a bull’s-eye

    Etching nanoscale, concentric ridges around a lamp-on-a-chip known as a light-emitting diode, or LED, brightens the device's glow seven-fold.

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