Physics
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We summarize the week's scientific breakthroughs every Thursday.
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Materials ScienceNanoglue attaches tissues to each other
Silica particles could repair and help engineer human organs.
By Beth Mole -
Particle PhysicsHiggs boson tale wins book prize
The Particle at the End of the Universe by Sean Carroll.
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Materials ScienceMaterial inspired by dragonfly wings bursts bacteria
Silicon studded with nanostructures could act as antimicrobial coating on medical devices.
By Beth Mole -
PhysicsRipple effect
If you want ripples in your icicles, just add salt. This recipe comes from physicists reporting in the October New Journal of Physics.
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PhysicsCruise through a collider
Now anyone can tour the Large Hadron Collider and other CERN experiments in 360-degree photo panoramas online.
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Materials ScienceInvisibility cloaks could slim down with active approach
The new light-canceling technique could hide objects of any shape and size.
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AstronomyHigh-energy neutrinos ensnared from beyond the solar system
Speedy particles detected in Antarctica may point to gargantuan black holes or cataclysmic explosions.
By Andrew Grant -
ChemistryHow butterflies stay dry
Slightly bumpy surfaces reduce water drops’ contact time.
By Meghan Rosen -
PhysicsSingle photon detected but not destroyed
Researchers build first instrument that can witness the passage of a light particle without absorbing it.
By Andrew Grant -
Quantum PhysicsQuantum information storage that lasts and lasts
Physicists have stored a snippet of quantum information at room temperature for more than 1,000 times the previous record.
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PhysicsSingle atoms hold on to information
Minutes-long data storage by individual atoms beats previous record of tiny fraction of a second.
By Andrew Grant -
Materials ScienceIce aided construction of Forbidden City
Workers slid heavy stone using liquid and frozen water to move it forward.