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  • 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 - 19 Feb 2007
    When excited, atoms move at impossibly small length and time scales -- too small and too fast to have been observed in years past. But as applied and engineering physics professor Joel D. Brock...
  • News - 19 Feb 2007
    Advances in digital electronic circuits have prompted the boost in functions and ever- smaller size of such popular consumer goods as digital cameras, MP3 players and digital televisions. But the same...
  • News - 13 Feb 2007
    Agent 007 is a mighty versatile fellow, but he would have to take backseat to agents being trained at Washington University in St. Louis. Computer scientist engineers here are using wireless sensor...
  • News - 13 Feb 2007
    Ferro Corporation has introduced its new Evolution(TM) coatings, which take today's stylish metallic kitchen finishes to a higher level, with performance that maintains beauty to build long-term...
  • News - 30 Jan 2007
    The development of hydrogen fuel cells for vehicles, the ultimate green dream in transportation energy, is another step closer. Researchers with the U.S. Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley...
  • News - 23 Jan 2007
    Researchers at Sandia National Laboratories are developing the next generation of screening devices that will identify hazardous and toxic materials even if concealed by clothing and packaging...
  • News - 9 Jan 2007
    Imagine Michelangelo being forced to paing on a surface many times smaller than the actual square footage of the Sistine Chapel. What if DaVinci's Mona Lisa was brushed onto a tiny one-foot-...
  • News - 4 Jan 2007
    To your left runs a high-voltage power cable that is worn, but still physically sound. To your right runs a cable that looks identical, but damaged insulation means the cable is vulnerable to a short....
  • News - 23 Nov 2006
    The threat of 'dirty' bombs and plans to use nuclear power as an energy source have driven Queensland University of Technology scientists to discover a new, safer way of detecting radioative...

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