ScienceDaily: Top Technology News |
- How knots can swap positions on a DNA strand
- From pencil marks to quantum computers
- With 'ribbons' of graphene, width matters: A narrow enough ribbon will transform a high-performance conductor into a semiconductor
- Ultrasound for astronomers? A young star's age can be gleamed from nothing but sound waves
- Safer, cheaper building blocks for future anti-HIV and cancer drugs
- Controversial clues of two 'Goldilocks planets' that might support life are proven false
- Tunable quantum behavior observed in bilayer graphene
- Oklahoma earthquakes induced by wastewater injection by disposal wells, study finds
- Discovery expands search for Earth-like planets: Newly spotted frozen world orbits in a binary star system
- Hollow-fiber membranes could cut separation costs, energy use
- Identifying microbial species: New device will help identify the millions of bacteria that populate the world
- Tool helps guide brain cancer surgery
- NASA radio delivered for Europe's 2016 Mars orbiter
- New social media study investigates relationships among Facebook use, narcissism and empathy
- Behavioral economics: Rich boys more competitive
- Power consumption of robot joints could be 40% less
How knots can swap positions on a DNA strand Posted: 03 Jul 2014 01:23 PM PDT |
From pencil marks to quantum computers Posted: 03 Jul 2014 01:23 PM PDT One of the hottest materials in condensed matter research today is graphene. Graphene had an unlikely start: it began with researchers messing around with pencil marks on paper. Pencil "lead" is actually made of graphite, which is a soft crystal lattice made of nothing but carbon atoms. When pencils deposit that graphite on paper, the lattice is laid down in thin sheets. By pulling that lattice apart into thinner sheets -- originally using Scotch tape -- researchers discovered that they could make flakes of crystal just one atom thick. |
Posted: 03 Jul 2014 11:24 AM PDT Using graphene ribbons of unimaginably small widths -- just several atoms across -- a group of researchers has found a novel way to "tune" the wonder material, causing the extremely efficient conductor of electricity to act as a semiconductor. In principle, their method for producing these narrow ribbons -- at a width roughly equal to the diameter of a strand of human DNA -- and manipulating the ribbons' electrical conductivity could be used to produce nano-devices. |
Ultrasound for astronomers? A young star's age can be gleamed from nothing but sound waves Posted: 03 Jul 2014 11:24 AM PDT |
Safer, cheaper building blocks for future anti-HIV and cancer drugs Posted: 03 Jul 2014 11:24 AM PDT |
Controversial clues of two 'Goldilocks planets' that might support life are proven false Posted: 03 Jul 2014 11:23 AM PDT Mysteries about controversial signals from a star considered a prime target in the search for extraterrestrial life now have been solved. The research proves, for the first time, that some of the signals actually are from events inside the star itself, not from the two so-called 'Goldilocks planets,' which were suspected to be just-right for life and orbiting the star at a distance where liquid water potentially could exist. No planets there, just star burps. |
Tunable quantum behavior observed in bilayer graphene Posted: 03 Jul 2014 11:23 AM PDT |
Oklahoma earthquakes induced by wastewater injection by disposal wells, study finds Posted: 03 Jul 2014 11:23 AM PDT |
Posted: 03 Jul 2014 11:21 AM PDT A newly discovered planet is expanding astronomers' notions of where Earth-like—and even potentially habitable—planets can form, and how to find them. At twice the mass of Earth, the planet orbits one of the stars in the binary system at almost exactly the same distance from which Earth orbits the sun. However, because the planet's host star is much dimmer than the sun, the planet is much colder thanEarth -- a little colder, in fact, than Jupiter's icy moon Europa. |
Hollow-fiber membranes could cut separation costs, energy use Posted: 03 Jul 2014 11:21 AM PDT Researchers have developed a microfluidic technique for fabricating a new class of metal-organic framework (MOF) membranes inside hollow polymer fibers that are just a few hundred microns in diameter. The new fabrication process, believed to be the first to grow MOF membranes inside hollow fibers, could potentially change the way large-scale energy-intensive chemical separations are done. |
Posted: 03 Jul 2014 09:58 AM PDT Millions of microbial species populate the world, but so far only a few have been identified due to the inability of most microbes to grow in the laboratory. An engineer and a biologist aim to change this. The pair has developed a device that allows scientists to cultivate a single species of bacteria that can then be studied and identified. |
Tool helps guide brain cancer surgery Posted: 03 Jul 2014 07:29 AM PDT A tool to help brain surgeons test and more precisely remove cancerous tissue was successfully used during surgery. The mass spectrometry tool sprays a microscopic stream of charged solvent onto the tissue surface to gather information about its molecular makeup and produces a color-coded image that reveals the location, nature and concentration of tumor cells. |
NASA radio delivered for Europe's 2016 Mars orbiter Posted: 03 Jul 2014 07:27 AM PDT |
New social media study investigates relationships among Facebook use, narcissism and empathy Posted: 03 Jul 2014 07:25 AM PDT |
Behavioral economics: Rich boys more competitive Posted: 03 Jul 2014 06:21 AM PDT |
Power consumption of robot joints could be 40% less Posted: 03 Jul 2014 06:20 AM PDT Robots are being increasingly used in industrial processes because of their ability to carry out repetitive tasks in a precise, reliable way. Right now, digital controllers are used to drive the motors of the joints of these robots. And it is no easy task developing and programming these controllers so that they will work efficiently. Scientists have developed a way of propelling these systems or robots in a more energy-efficient way and have shown, on a laboratory level, that in some cases energy consumption can be cut by up to 40%. |
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