Physics

  1. Physics

    An electron ruler gauges crystal flaws

    Electrons ricocheting through a crystal now make it possible for scientists to discern shifts in crystal lattices as small as a hundredth of an atom's width.

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  2. Physics

    To freeze this liquid, add heat

    A wrong-headed mixture of liquid starch, water, and a solvent freezes when heated.

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  3. Physics

    Hurrying a nuclear identity switch

    Radioactive beryllium-7 atoms locked inside molecular cages decay extraordinarily quickly.

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  4. Physics

    Wake Up, Little Surfers: Riding waves toward tabletop accelerators

    Prospects that today's giant particle accelerators could shrink to the size of rooms look better than ever, now that new experiments have produced electron pulses of uniform energy from laser-powered accelerators that act over millimeter distances.

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  5. Physics

    Marrying matter and light

    Physicists have created circuit components that, in a manner analogous to atoms, meld with light, opening new ways to study fundamental light-matter interactions.

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  6. Physics

    Spooky Timing: Quantum-linked photons coordinate clock ticks

    Physicists have demonstrated a new technique for bringing distant clocks into closer synchronization by means of entangled photons whose quantum properties are mysteriously correlated.

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  7. Physics

    Orbiting relativity test gets slow start

    Unexpected but necessary adjustments to a satelliteborne test of relativity theory have slashed the time available to collect data.

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  8. Materials Science

    Heat-controlled implant delivers insulin on demand

    The field of drug delivery is literally heating up, with the development of a new polymer implant that releases insulin in response to changes in temperature.

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  9. Physics

    Information, Please

    Understanding whether the information swallowed by black holes is destroyed forever may provide physicists with new clues for unifying gravity and quantum theories.

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  10. Materials Science

    Nanotech Goes to New Lengths: Scientists create ultralong carbon nanotubes

    In an advance toward making superstrong fibers, chemists have synthesized a 4-centimeter-long carbon nanotube, the longest nanotube reported to date.

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  11. Physics

    Extreme Impersonations

    By creating tiny clouds of remarkable new kinds of ultracold gases, physicists are, in essence, bringing to their lab benches chunks of some of the most extraordinary and hard-to-study matter in the universe.

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  12. Materials Science

    Falling into Place: Atom mist yields nanobricks and mortar

    Researchers have induced tiny particles of nickel to spontaneously assemble into exceptionally uniform, three-dimensional arrays of macroscopic size.

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