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News & Articles By Edsel Cook
11/15/2019
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By Edsel Cook
High-intensity sound waves and lasers: How does the loudest underwater sound ever affect materials and biological samples?
What would you do if you had access to one of the most powerful lasers in the world? Stanford researchers used the said high-output device to create one of the loudest sounds possible underwater. They wanted to know the effects of that sound on both materials and biological organisms. Sound is more than meets the […]
11/13/2019
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By Edsel Cook
No more spoiled milk? Researchers develop unique sensor that can “smell” if milk has expired without opening the container
You may not trust the expiration date printed on the milk container for various reasons. That’s why researchers have made a new colorimetric nanosensor that “smells” the dairy product to see if it’s still safe for drinking. Researchers from various departments and schools of Washington State University (WSU) pooled their expertise together to create a device […]
11/08/2019
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By Edsel Cook
3D-printed generator allows you to generate electricity from snowfall
People can now tap snowfall for electricity, thanks to triboelectric nanogenerators that collect electrical energy from innocuous activities like footsteps and raindrops. The new energy harvester, developed by the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), is not only inexpensive but light as well – matching the thinness and flexibility of a plastic sheet. “The device can work […]
10/31/2019
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By Edsel Cook
Advancing detection and diagnosis: Scientists enable 3D printers to print glass using material called chalcogenide glass
Additive manufacturing systems have added another challenging material to the list of things they may print on the fly. Canadian researchers demonstrated the capability to print out chalcogenide glass with a modified 3D printer. Chalcogenide glass is a type of covalently bonded glass that contains certain chemicals called “chalcogens.” It sees extensive use in optical […]
10/29/2019
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By Edsel Cook
Cars running on “clean” hydrogen one step closer – world’s fastest hydrogen sensor developed
The safe and effective use of flammable hydrogen gas as a source of energy depends on the capabilities of the sensor system. In response, Swedish researchers has come up with hydrogen sensors that run fast enough to hit the performance targets for hydrogen-powered vehicles of the future. Their optical nanosensor fits within a plastic-based capsule. […]
10/29/2019
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By Edsel Cook
Understanding metallic glass: Scientists discover liquid metals form structures that help solidify metallic glasses
When you think of liquids, they usually don’t form structures that stop their atoms and molecules from flowing freely. But Yale researchers demonstrated that the right circumstances allow liquid metals to create the rigid shapes required by metallic glasses. Furthermore, they proposed that the structures formed by liquid metals might play a significant role in […]
10/25/2019
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By Edsel Cook
How are moons made? Scientists study moon fractures to understand how they are formed
The surface of the moon may be more battered than previously believed. Researchers say that deep fractures from ancient asteroid impacts reach miles into the lunar rock. The moon tore free from the young Earth more than four billion years ago. Since then, it took countless impacts from meteors and asteroids that left various marks […]
10/23/2019
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By Edsel Cook
Swiss startup invents higher-performance electric car battery that can leave Tesla batteries in the dust
A startup in the tiny mountainous country of Switzerland promises to deliver what electric car giant Tesla Motors has failed to pull off. Its new lithium-ion battery is said to store and produce far more power for vehicles than existing designs. Swiss company Innolith claims that an electric vehicle equipped with its lithium battery would […]
10/21/2019
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By Edsel Cook
Bioengineers discover “breakthrough” technique: 3D-printed organs to be available in the next two decades
Additive manufacturing systems have come one step closer to printing out whole, working organs for emergency medical transplants. Researchers reported 3D printing a complete system of blood vessels found on a major organ. Every day, around 20 patients who desperately need an organ transplant die before ever getting one. There are not enough donors – […]
10/19/2019
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By Edsel Cook
Researchers successfully generate electricity from “the coldness of the universe”: New technology could complement alternative energy sources like solar power
You’ve heard of all the ways to convert light or wind or heat into usable electricity. But have you ever thought that the coldness of the universe might serve as an alternative source of clean and renewable power? Most energy production systems get their power from somewhere. Solar panels collect light while wind turbines rely […]
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