Physics

  1. Physics

    Extreme Impersonations

    By creating tiny clouds of remarkable new kinds of ultracold gases, physicists are, in essence, bringing to their lab benches chunks of some of the most extraordinary and hard-to-study matter in the universe.

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  2. Materials Science

    Falling into Place: Atom mist yields nanobricks and mortar

    Researchers have induced tiny particles of nickel to spontaneously assemble into exceptionally uniform, three-dimensional arrays of macroscopic size.

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  3. Materials Science

    Model Growth: Simulations expose branching nature of polymer crystals

    Using computer models, scientists have uncovered previously unknown facets of the physics underlying polymer crystal growth.

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  4. Physics

    Gold quantum dots

    Scientists have created a new type of quantum dot that could find applications in everything from biological imaging to computer displays.

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  5. Materials Science

    Face to Face: Crystal-growth method bodes electric payoff

    A new method for growing silicon carbide eliminates crystal defects that have long prevented the compound's wider use in electric devices.

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  6. Materials Science

    Warm Reflections: Window tint kicks in when it’s hot

    A novel window coating automatically transforms into a heat mirror only when warmed above room temperature.

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  7. Physics

    Antimatter loses again

    A study of subatomic B mesons reveals a new way in which the laws of physics differ for matter and antimatter, providing another clue to why there's almost no antimatter in the universe today.

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  8. Materials Science

    Bacterial glue: The stuff that binds?

    A sticky slime secreted by bacteria could soon find its way into a host of wood products, including plywood and particleboard.

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  9. Materials Science

    Sea urchin shell lights the way for optical material

    Using the porous skeleton of a sea urchin as a template, materials scientists have fabricated a photonic crystal.

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  10. Materials Science

    Savvy Sieve: Carbon nanotubes filter petroleum, polluted water

    A filter made out of carbon nanotubes has potential for such applications as processing crude oil and decontaminating drinking water.

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  11. Materials Science

    To make bronze, tin flakes do a wild dance

    Upsetting some prevailing ideas about how alloys form, rafts of tin atoms jitterbug madly around on a pure copper surface and leave spots of bronze in their wakes.

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  12. Materials Science

    Charging gold with a single electron

    Dropping a single electron onto a gold atom with a scanning tunneling microscope converts gold from its neutral state to an ionic state.

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