Peter Weiss

All Stories by Peter Weiss

  1. Tech

    Electronics in the Round: Mixing plastic and silicon yields form-fitting circuitry

    Investigators used ordinary integrated-circuit fabrication techniques to pattern arrays of silicon-based transistors onto a flat, deformable sheet of plastic.

  2. Materials Science

    A Cut above the Ordinary: Low-tech machining yields coveted nanostructure

    A new finding that machining of metals imparts a hard, fine-grained structure to turnings and other scraps may lead to less costly but more durable parts for cars and other applications.

  3. Physics

    Violent chemistry saps sonobubble energy

    In liquids agitated by sound waves, imploding gas bubbles get cooled when atoms recombine, making the bubbles unlikely nuclear reactors.

  4. Tech

    Micromachine runs on nuclear power

    Radioactivity creates electric fields that wiggle a tiny lever.

  5. Physics

    Scaling energy barriers to save data

    Researchers demonstrate a promising new way to make semiconductor-based memory that doesn't erase when the power goes off.

  6. Physics

    Sunlight Sponge? Energy trackers gauge water vapor’s wild dance

    Atmospheric water vapor takes in more solar radiation than has been indicated by measurements and models, but laser probes of highly agitated water molecules suggest that the vapor doesn't absorb enough radiation to explain the discrepancy fully.

  7. Tech

    Shrinking toward the Ultimate Transistor

    Scientists demonstrate transistor action in an atom—or two.

  8. Astronomy

    Cosmic Twist: X’s may mark spots where black holes merge

    If whacked by a companion black hole, a big, jet-emitting black hole may spew superhot plasma in a new, crosswise direction.

  9. Physics

    Law and Disorder: Chance fluctuations can rule the nanorealm

    A tug-of-war in a water droplet demonstrates that random fluctuations wield more than enough muscle to give nanoscale machines trouble.

  10. Physics

    Heavy Suspicion: Elemental discoveries trace to fake data

    A prominent physicist has lost his job following allegations that he fabricated the evidence underpinning his team's now-discredited discovery of elements 116 and 118.

  11. Physics

    Paper planes get laser liftoff

    Powering aircraft by remote lasers works—at least on paper.

  12. Tech

    Software bugs cost big bucks

    An epidemic of software errors in industrial computer programs is costing the United States $60 billion per year.