Physics
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We summarize the week's scientific breakthroughs every Thursday.
- 			 Physics Physics2011 American Physical Society meetingPowerful X-rays illuminate hidden messages from the past, plus Lyme disease sensors and graphene transistors in meeting news. By Science News
- 			 Physics Physics2011 American Physical Society meetingPowerful X-rays illuminate hidden messages from the past, plus Lyme disease sensors and graphene transistors in meeting news. By Science News
- 			 Chemistry ChemistryJapan nuke accident seen from SeattleRadioactive particles retrieved in the Pacific Northwest offer clues to events inside the crippled Fukushima Daiichi plant. By Devin Powell
- 			 Chemistry ChemistrySilicene: It could be the new grapheneSingle-layer sheets of silicon might have electronic applications. By Devin Powell
- 			 Physics PhysicsDiamond could store quantum informationA new technique would use flaws in crystal structure to hold data. By Devin Powell
- 			 Chemistry ChemistryMolecules/Matter & EnergyParticles found surfing on hot plasma, plus spinning atoms and a new deep-Earth mineral in this week’s news. By Science News
- 			 Tech TechU.S. network detects Fukushima plumeTraces of radioactivity attributable to the earthquake-damaged Fukushima reactor complex in Japan have reached the West Coast of the United States. By Janet Raloff
- 			 Tech TechRadiation: Japan’s third crisisAs if the magnitude-9 earthquake on March 11 and killer tsunami weren’t enough, a new round of aftershocks — psychological ones over fear of radiation — are rocking Japan and its neighbors. By Janet Raloff
- 			 Chemistry ChemistryMolecules/Matter & EnergyAnthrax used in 2001 attacks have been genetically decoded, plus booze-soaked superconductors and an inverse Doppler effect in this week’s news. By Science News
- 			 Physics PhysicsTractor beams arrive two centuries earlyTrekkie devices that can pull instead of push have been developed by U.S. and Chinese physicists to move small objects. By Devin Powell
- 			 Physics PhysicsSoot hastens snowmelt on Tibetan PlateauBlack carbon pollution is a more potent driver of melting in the region than increases in carbon dioxide, a new computer simulation suggests. By Janet Raloff
- 			 Chemistry ChemistryMolecules/Matter & EnergyLasers 'draw' nanosized structures, plus twisty turbines and quantum vibrations in this week's news. By Science News