Physics
Water jets may break up into droplets thanks to jiggling molecules
Streams of liquid form drops thanks to unidentified disturbances. It could be the jiggling of individual molecules.
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Streams of liquid form drops thanks to unidentified disturbances. It could be the jiggling of individual molecules.
We summarize the week's scientific breakthroughs every Thursday.
With a high-speed camera and a tiny guillotine, scientists showed that chopping onions slowly and with sharper knives cuts down on tears.
Google says its quantum computer achieved a verifiable calculation that classic computers cannot. The work could point to future applications.
At an effective temperature of 13 million kelvins, the jiggling glass sphere could help scientists understand physics at the microscale.
By weaving Kevlar or polyethylene nanofibers into standard neoprene in wetsuits, researchers found ways to limit injury during rare encounters with sharks.
The advance hints at the possibility of portable muon-making devices that could help peer through solid materials for hidden contraband.
In the 1980s, John Clarke, Michel Devoret and John Martinis demonstrated quantum effects in an electric circuit, an advance that underlies today’s quantum computers.
Parachutes inspired by Japanese paper cutting unfurl automatically and fall more predictably than standard parachutes.
Chemists have discovered tiny zaps of electricity moving between “swamp-gas” bubbles. Could they ignite methane gas to glow as dancing blue flames?
Scientists have filmed nanoscale ice crystals adapting to trapped air bubbles without losing structural integrity.
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