
Riding the Wave of Liquid:Liquid Interfaces
Crests of watery waves breaking in oil may be the gatekeepers to transport vital chemicals in industrial separation process.
Crests of watery waves breaking in oil may be the gatekeepers to transport vital chemicals in industrial separation process.
Researchers developed a new self-generating lubricant with great potential for industrial applications.
Charged particles emanating from Jupiter’s magnetosphere are powered up to create the northern and southern lights on Ganymede, Jupiter’s largest moon.
Enabling beams to respond to plasma conditions in real time allows scientists to avoid instabilities and raise performance.
Collaboration powers machine learning software that performs data analytics on petabyte-sized data sets in series of successful test runs.
Systems biology leads the way to exascale computing on Summit supercomputer.
The first-ever computation of an atomic nucleus, the deuteron, on a quantum chip demonstrates that even today’s rudimentary quantum computers can solve nuclear physics questions.
Researchers design self-assembling nanosheets that mimic the surface of cells.
Scientists add active control to design capabilities for new lightweight flat optical devices.
Supercomputer simulations and theoretical analysis shed new light on when and how fast reconnection occurs.
A new supercapacitor could be a competitive alternative to lithium-ion batteries.
Atom probe tomography reveals key explanations for stable performance over a cutting-edge diesel-exhaust catalyst’s lifetime.