ScienceDaily: Top Technology News |
- NASA selects studies for the asteroid redirect mission
- Super-stretchable yarn is made of graphene
- Experimentally testing nonlocality in many-body systems
- No such thing as a 'finished article': The truth behind online news
- Don't tell the other team! Is this the ultimate guide to scoring and saving penalties?
- Safe water for the people in Tanzania
- Major step forward for the world's largest optical/infrared telescope
- Materials for the building industry: A shape-conscious alloy
- Sweetest calculator in the world: Sugar molecules used as part of a chemical sequence for information processing
- Safety system for city, school buses will avoid accidents around bus stops
NASA selects studies for the asteroid redirect mission Posted: 20 Jun 2014 11:37 AM PDT NASA has selected 18 proposals for studies under the Asteroid Redirect Mission Broad Agency Announcement (BAA). These six-month studies will mature system concepts and key technologies and assess the feasibility of potential commercial partnerships to support the agency's Asteroid Redirect Mission, a key part of the agency's stepping stone path to send humans to Mars. |
Super-stretchable yarn is made of graphene Posted: 20 Jun 2014 11:37 AM PDT |
Experimentally testing nonlocality in many-body systems Posted: 20 Jun 2014 09:04 AM PDT Researchers constructed multipartite Bell inequalities built from the easiest-to-measure quantities, the two-body correlators, which are capable of revealing nonlocality in many-body systems. As these are considered a fundamental resource for quantum information theory, this study will pave a new path towards experimental detection of nonlocality in large composite quantum systems. |
No such thing as a 'finished article': The truth behind online news Posted: 20 Jun 2014 07:31 AM PDT News delivery and consumption has rapidly changed in the digital era. No longer print-bound, the BBC, Guardian, Daily Mail and FT use blog format online news delivery, giving live commentary and many edited versions. Powerful news sources such as Twitter also abound, challenging the more conventional channels to beat to a faster pace. |
Don't tell the other team! Is this the ultimate guide to scoring and saving penalties? Posted: 20 Jun 2014 07:31 AM PDT As the world once again draws its attention to the FIFA World Cup, fans watch in fervor to see their country take on all-comers, in hopes that they will become the world champion. Surely, no part of the event is more tense, dramatic and exhilarating than the penalty shootout- a situation that often determines who goes through to the next round, and who heads home. |
Safe water for the people in Tanzania Posted: 20 Jun 2014 07:23 AM PDT Hydraulic engineers and photovoltaics experts have developed a solar filtration system to produce high-quality drinking water from polluted brackish water and tested it successfully in Tanzania. The test results are currently being analyzed. The filter effectively separates undesired substances, bacteria, and viruses. |
Major step forward for the world's largest optical/infrared telescope Posted: 20 Jun 2014 07:23 AM PDT |
Materials for the building industry: A shape-conscious alloy Posted: 20 Jun 2014 07:21 AM PDT When the frame of a pair of glasses is bent out of shape, it's not that easy to return it to its original form. If, however, your spectacles are made of a shape memory alloy then you don't have a problem. Just place the frame in hot water and bingo! – they're as good as new again. Empa researchers have now shown that these materials can also find applications in the building industry. For example in the reinforcement of bridges. |
Posted: 19 Jun 2014 06:56 AM PDT A rectangular plastic board with 384 small wells is the setting for a chemist-researcher. The chemist carefully pipets some drops of sugar solution into a row of the tiny reaction vessels. As soon as the fluid has mixed with the contents of the vessels, fluorescence starts in some of the wells. What the chemist does here – with his own hands – could also be called in a very simplified way, the 'sweetest computer in the world'. The reason: the sugar molecules used are part of a chemical sequence for information processing. |
Safety system for city, school buses will avoid accidents around bus stops Posted: 18 Jun 2014 07:05 AM PDT A new safety system for city and school buses that detects the presence of pedestrians in the surroundings of the bus stop, warns the driver of dangerous conditions and, ultimately, directly affects the vehicle, has been developed by researchers. The system incorporates different cameras placed at strategic points of the bus that allow the driver to see where the rear-view mirrors can't. |
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