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Results 361 - 370 of 4938 for ELectrons
  • News - 7 Jul 2023
    When your laptop or smartphone heats up, it's due to energy that's lost in translation. The same goes for power lines that transmit electricity between cities. In fact, around 10 percent of...
  • News - 30 Sep 2021
    Scientists, guided by the University of Cambridge, discovered a loss pathway in organic solar cells which renders their efficiency lower than silicon-based cells when it comes to turning sunlight into...
  • News - 9 Nov 2011
    A review article, ‘Klein Tunneling in Graphene: Optics with Massless Electrons,’ written by J.N. Fuchs and P.E. Allain of the Université Paris-Sud in the European Physical Journal,...
  • News - 24 Dec 2007
    Fifty years after the Nobel-prize winning explanation of how superconductors work, a research team from Los Alamos National Laboratory, the University of Edinburgh and Cambridge University are...
  • News - 11 Oct 2023
    The energy needed to expel an electron from a material is a fundamental characteristic that governs electron flow and is a crucial consideration in device design. Traditionally, altering this property...
  • News - 23 Mar 2023
    A model system created by stacking a pair of monolayer semiconductors is giving physicists a simpler way to study confounding quantum behavior, from heavy fermions to exotic quantum phase...
  • News - 8 Aug 2016
    Researchers from the Imperial College London have suggested that it is possible to create a new form of light by coupling light into a single electron. The resulting light has the properties of...
  • News - 23 Jul 2015
    A research team has developed a new hybrid photocatalyst that utilizes visible light to break down BPAs. This catalyst could be used for safe disposal of BPAs and other similar materials, and for...
  • News - 13 Apr 2010
    In an electrifying first, Stanford scientists have plugged in to algae cells and harnessed a tiny electric current. They found it at the very source of energy production - photosynthesis, a...
  • News - 17 Nov 2009
    First, it was the soccer-ball-shaped molecules dubbed buckyballs. Then it was the cylindrically shaped nanotubes. Now, the hottest new material in physics and nanotechnology is graphene: a remarkably...

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