New Tabletop Detector “Sees” Single Electrons
MIT physicists have developed a new tabletop particle detector that is able to identify single electrons in a radioactive gas.
Read more about New Tabletop Detector “Sees” Single Electrons
MIT physicists have developed a new tabletop particle detector that is able to identify single electrons in a radioactive gas.
Read more about New Tabletop Detector “Sees” Single Electrons
A group of researchers in the Department of Mechanical Engineering and the Department of Materials Science and Engineering at Texas A&M University led by Dr. Xinghang Zhang has investigated defect dynamics in heavy ion (Krypton) irradiated nanotwinned Ag and revealed twin boundary-defect clusters interactions via in situ radiation.
Read more about Physics of Heavy Ion Induced Damage in Nanotwinned Metals Revealed by Researchers at Texas A&M University
University of California, Berkeley, seismologists have produced for the first time a sharp, three-dimensional scan of Earth’s interior that conclusively connects plumes of hot rock rising through the mantle with surface hotspots that generate volcanic island chains like Hawaii, Samoa and Iceland.
Read more about CT Scan of Earth Links Deep Mantle Plumes with Volcanic Hotspots
William and Mary researchers are studying the mysteries of ghost particles known as neutrinos through the NOvA experiment, which is managed by DOE’s Fermilab.
Read more about Faculty and Students Work on “Ghost Particle” Experiment
Using an enormous X-ray laser — one of only two such machines on Earth — UNL physicist Matthias Fuchs and other scientists from around the world beat formidable odds to observe one of the most fundamental interactions between X-rays and matter.
Read more about Fuchs Leads First Team to Observe X-Ray Phenomenon
Researchers at Michigan State University have built a molecular Swiss Army knife that streamlines the molecular machinery of cyanobacteria, also known as blue-green algae, making biofuels and other green chemical production from these organisms more viable.
Read more about Building a Biofuel-Boosting Swiss Army Knife
Researchers at the University of Delaware have discovered new ways to control and tune how nanoparticles arrange themselves in polymer matrices, which could open new ways to tailor the properties of new materials.
Read more about Tuning Polymer Interpenetration
Researchers at Caltech have shown that metallic glasses do have an atomic-level structure—if you zoom in closely enough—although it differs from the periodic lattices that characterize crystalline metals.
Read more about Atomic Fractals in Metallic Glasses
University of Michigan researchers will build critical components of DESI, the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument whose mission is to shed light on the role of dark energy in the history of the universe's expansion.
Read more about Dark Energy Probe Involving the University of Michigan Reaches Critical Milestone
Harvard researchers have designed new multimaterial printheads that mix and print concentrated viscoelastic inks that allow for the simultaneous control of composition and geometry during printing.
Read more about Printing Lightweight, Flexible, and Functional Materials
‘High energy’ researchers at Northern Illinois University attract $1.77 million in new grants.
Read more about Physics Flexes its Muscles
Researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison are splitting water into hydrogen fuel with a sunlight powered catalyst composed of common and less costly elements such as phosphorus, sulfur, and cobalt.
Read more about Discovery of a Highly Efficient Catalyst Eases Way to Hydrogen Economy