Physics

  1. Materials Science

    Buckyballs turn on copper’s magnetism

    Exposure to buckyballs bestows ironlike magnetic properties onto the normally nonmagnetic metals copper and manganese.

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  2. Quantum Physics

    Quantum communication takes a new twist

    A three-kilometer transmission of light above the Vienna skyline demonstrates that scientists can use the twistiness of light to encode delicate quantum information.

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  3. Physics

    Revamping the metric measure of mass

    The units of the metric system are on track for a 2018 makeover.

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  4. Materials Science

    Stretchy fiber lets electrons flow

    Folded layers of carbon nanotubes allow an elastic fiber to conduct electrical current when stretched.

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  5. Materials Science

    Stretchy fiber keeps electrons flowing

    Folded layers of carbon nanotubes allow an elastic fiber to conduct electrical current when stretched.

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  6. Physics

    Elusive particle shows up in ‘semimetal’

    Weyl fermions, which resemble massless electrons, have been spotted inside tantalum arsenide. Their discovery comes 86 years after they were proposed.

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  7. Particle Physics

    LHC reports pentaquark sightings

    Two particles discovered at the Large Hadron Collider are composed of five quarks, not two or three like nearly every other known quark-based particle.

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  8. Astronomy

    Source of blazars’ super brightness comes into focus

    Astronomers take a close look at a blazar, a galaxy whose central black hole emits gamma rays and other high-energy material toward Earth.

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  9. Physics

    Swimming bacteria remove resistance to flow

    The collective motion of swimming bacteria can virtually eliminate a water-based solution’s resistance to flow.

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  10. Physics

    The arrow of time

    Gravity may explain how time always runs forward, even though the laws of physics should permit it to run backward.

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  11. Physics

    Magnetic test boosts case for record-setting superconductor

    New measurements bolster the case that hydrogen sulfide is superconducting at about 200 kelvins, roughly 40 kelvins higher than any other known material.

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  12. Physics

    In retirement, Nobelist takes up moon bouncing

    A lifelong amateur radio enthusiast, Joseph Taylor sends signals via the moon.

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