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Results 301 - 310 of 654 for Cold working
  • News - 10 Aug 2007
    Imagine a world where a machine creates a “virtual you” by modeling how you think and your expertise on a subject. Or one where your car’s computer appreciates your driving skills...
  • News - 19 Mar 2007
    Sandia’s huge Z machine, which generates temperatures hotter than the sun, has turned water to ice in nanoseconds. However, don’t expect anything commercial just yet: the ice is hotter...
  • News - 19 Feb 2007
    Stanford physicist Mark Kasevich has adapted the technology in today's airplane navigation systems to work with atoms so cold that they almost stand still. At temperatures scarcely above absolute...
  • News - 1 Nov 2006
    Nippon Steel Corporation has now decided to make an investment for the integrated mass production setup for high-strength UO-pipe (large-diameter welded pipe) at the pipe mill of its Kimitsu Works....
  • News - 31 Oct 2006
    Car engines that consume less energy and can keep running on low oil, lead-free plumbing fixtures, and tanks that are light enough to be airlifted, but are just as rugged as the much heavier...
  • News - 4 Oct 2006
    Supercomputer simulations by two Sandia researchers have significantly altered the theoretical diagram universally used by scientists to understand the characteristics of water at extreme temperatures...
  • News - 21 Jun 2006
    A research team from IBM and the Georgia Institute of Technology has demonstrated the first silicon-germanium transistor able to operate at frequencies above 500 GHz. Though the record performance was...
  • News - 19 Jan 2006
    Imagine you are standing, John Wayne style, on the backs of two runaway horses pulling a stagecoach. You try to bring the horses to a stop but instead the harnesses break, the horses separate, and an...
  • News - 8 Nov 2005
    Robots, both large and micro, can potentially go wherever it's too hot, cold, dangerous, small or remote for people to perform any number of important tasks, from repairing leaking water mains to...
  • News - 25 Jul 2005
    Using a high-tech but low-cost technique, a Johns Hopkins undergraduate has tested tiny samples of four metal alloys to find the best blend for use in platinum jewelry. After evaluating four metal...

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