ScienceDaily: Top Technology News |
- Connected traffic system for emergency responders demonstrated
- Ancient volcanic blast provides more evidence of water on early Mars
- Hubble to use moon as mirror to see Venus transit
- Building better asphalt with nanoclays
- Why Saturday’s 'supermoon' will be beautiful, but not super
- Light touch keeps a grip on delicate nanoparticles
- Using electrons to map nanoparticle atomic structures
- Gamma ray optics: a viable tool for a new branch of scientific discovery
Connected traffic system for emergency responders demonstrated Posted: 04 May 2012 02:20 PM PDT A prototype "smart drive" connected traffic system that can clear red light signals and warn of traffic tie-ups has been completed. |
Ancient volcanic blast provides more evidence of water on early Mars Posted: 04 May 2012 10:57 AM PDT Georgia Tech Assistant Professor Josef Dufek's new findings provide more evidence that early Mars was saturated with water and that its atmosphere was considerably thicker, at least 20 times more dense, than it is today. |
Hubble to use moon as mirror to see Venus transit Posted: 04 May 2012 10:57 AM PDT NASA's Hubble Space Telescope will study Venus's atmosphere during an upcoming opportunity where Venus is passing in front of the Sun. Hubble cannot look at the Sun directly, so astronomers are planning to point the telescope at the Moon, using it as a mirror. The next time Venus will pass in front of the Sun will be in the year 2117. |
Building better asphalt with nanoclays Posted: 04 May 2012 10:57 AM PDT Using nanotechnology, researchers are paving the way for brand-new asphalt blends to fight off cracks, rutting and potholes. |
Why Saturday’s 'supermoon' will be beautiful, but not super Posted: 04 May 2012 10:57 AM PDT Yes, it will be marginally brighter and larger, but Saturday's so-called "supermoon" is not going to be noticeably different from the full moon of the month before or after. An astronomer explains that a "supermoon" typically happens once a year, when the moon's elliptical orbit comes closest to Earth during a full moon. But the nickname makes it sound like a much bigger deal than it actually is. |
Light touch keeps a grip on delicate nanoparticles Posted: 04 May 2012 08:05 AM PDT Using a refined technique for trapping and manipulating nanoparticles, researchers have extended the trapped particles' useful life more than tenfold. This new approach, which one researcher likens to "attracting moths," promises to give experimenters the trapping time they need to build nanoscale structures and may open the way to working with nanoparticles inside biological cells without damaging the cells with intense laser light. |
Using electrons to map nanoparticle atomic structures Posted: 04 May 2012 08:04 AM PDT Scientists have shown how a form of nanocrystallography can be carried out using a transmission electron microscope -- an instrument found in many chemistry and materials science laboratories. |
Gamma ray optics: a viable tool for a new branch of scientific discovery Posted: 04 May 2012 08:00 AM PDT There has been a surprise discovery of 'significant' refraction of gamma rays which opens the door to nuclear photonics and the use of high energetic light beams to investigate the atomic nucleus. Isotope specific gamma ray microscopes could remotely search for harmful nuclear materials or provide less destructive and more selective medical imaging. |
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