Watching Neutrons Flow
Like water, neutrons seek their own level, and watching how they flow may teach us about how the chemical elements were made.
Like water, neutrons seek their own level, and watching how they flow may teach us about how the chemical elements were made.
Researchers demonstrate a new technique that could lead to significantly higher power proton beams used to answer tough scientific questions.
A twisted array of atomic magnets were driven to move in a curved path, a needed level of control for use in future memory devices.
Simple, economical process makes large-diameter, high-performance, thin, transparent, and conductive foils for bendable LEDs and more.
Tracking movements of individual particles provides understanding of collective motions, synchronization and self-assembly.
More atomic bonds is the key for performance in a newly discovered family of cage-structured compounds.
Bottom-up synthesis of tunable carbon nanoribbons provides a new route to enhance industrial, automotive reactions.
Enhanced stability in the presence of water could help reduce smokestack emissions of greenhouse gases.
New material based on common iron ore can help turn intermittent sunlight and water into long-lasting fuel.
Research reveals that giant viruses acquire genes piecemeal from others, with implications for bioenergy production and environmental cleanup.
Researchers find a grass gene affecting how plants manage water and carbon dioxide that could be useful to growing biofuel crops on marginal land.
Plants and soil microbes may be altered by climate warming at different rates and in different ways, meaning vital nutrient patterns could be misaligned.