Physics

  1. Materials Science

    Drug particle delivers insulin on demand

    Injectable polymer nanoparticles could store insulin in the body over several days and release the medication precisely when blood sugar concentrations change.

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  2. Materials Science

    Drug particle delivers insulin on demand

    Injectable polymer nanoparticles could store insulin in the body over several days and release the medication precisely when blood sugar concentrations change.

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  3. Physics

    Dune leapfrogging is deciphered

    Some wind-propelled sand dunes can pass right through each other if their relative sizes are right, new computer simulations indicate—although the sand grains of one dune don't actually penetrate through the other dune.

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  4. Physics

    Dune leapfrogging is deciphered

    Some wind-propelled sand dunes can pass right through each other if their relative sizes are right, new computer simulations indicate—although the sand grains of one dune don't actually penetrate through the other dune.

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  5. Physics

    Hints emerge of a four-quark particle

    Previously observed only in twos, threes, and perhaps in fives, quarks and antiquarks in a newfound particle may have glommed together to form a never-before-seen foursome.

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  6. Physics

    Particle Interactions

    The world’s leading particle physics laboratories have collaborated to provide a one-stop online resource for communicating research in the world of particle physics. Updated daily, the site provides news stories, science policy papers, conference information, and much more. An image bank contains photos and illustrations showing accelerators, detectors, particle collisions, historical events, aerial views, and […]

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  7. Physics

    Doppler Toppler: Experiment upends normal frequency shift

    The expected drop in frequency of a signal from a receding source—the Doppler effect—becomes a frequency increase when a high-current electric pulse creates extraordinary electromagnetic conditions in a web of electrical components.

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  8. Materials Science

    This Won’t Hurt . . . Tiny needles deliver drugs painlessly

    Microscopic needles may provide a painless alternative to syringes and patches.

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  9. Materials Science

    No Assembly Required: DNA brings carbon nanotube circuits in line

    Using DNA as a scaffold, researchers have devised a simple way of creating carbon nanotube transistors—a feat that paves the way for more complex circuits made from these nanomaterials.

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  10. Physics

    Quantum Pileup: Ultracold molecules meld into oneness

    Scientists have for the first time transformed molecules into an exotic state of matter called a Bose-Einstein condensate.

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  11. Physics

    Humpty-Dumpty Effect: Acoustically, people resemble large eggs

    The first measurements of how people intrinsically scatter sound waves indicate that, acoustically, a human body resembles a hard ellipsoid of the same height and girth as the person.

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  12. Materials Science

    Water Repellency Goes Nano: Carpet of carbon nanotubes cleans itself

    Forests of carbon nanotubes coated with Teflon yield a superhydrophobic material—the ultimate self-cleaning surface.

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