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  • News - 31 Jul 2007
    It was always thought to be restricted to everyday types, with no magnetic sorts allowed in the door. But the quantum dance party’s guest list just got bigger. In a paper that appeared...
  • News - 22 May 2007
    Capturing the coldest atoms in the universe within the confines of a laser beam, University of California, Berkeley, physicists have made a device that can map magnetic fields more precisely than ever...
  • News - 20 Apr 2007
    Ultra-hard materials are used for everything from drills that bore for oil and build new roads to scratch-resistant coatings for precision instruments and the face of your watch. UCLA scientists...
  • News - 19 Feb 2007
    Imagine a car that accelerates from zero to sixty in 250 feet, and then rockets to 120 miles per hour in just one more inch. That's essentially what a collaboration of accelerator physicists...
  • News - 7 Nov 2006
    There were some fears for the future of ferrous scrap when, two years ago, China was investing heavily in gigantic blast furnace-based steel production. However, with substantial new electric arc...
  • News - 31 May 2006
    As gas prices soar and greenhouse gases continue to blanket the atmosphere, the need for a clean, safe and cheap source of energy has never seemed more pressing. Scientists have long worked to...
  • News - 26 May 2006
    Hydrogen has been called "the fuel of the future." But the gas is invisible, odorless and explosive at high concentrations, posing a safety problem for hydrogen-powered cars, filling...
  • News - 23 Mar 2006
    Picture a bird, effortlessly adjusting its wings to catch every current of air. Airplanes that could do the same would have many advantages over today's flying machines, including increased fuel...
  • News - 10 Jan 2006
    They look like tiny swirling dust devils on the surface of the superconductor: "vortices" that appear where magnetic fields interact with the material. Unlike harmless dust devils, however,...
  • News - 15 Nov 2005
    Ohio State University researchers have invented a new organic polymer tunnel diode – an electronic component that could one day lead to plastic computer memory and plastic logic circuits on...

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