Spherical Powders Enable New Applications for Metals
Free-flowing metal powders offer improvements for additive manufacturing, isotope production target fabrication, and more.
Free-flowing metal powders offer improvements for additive manufacturing, isotope production target fabrication, and more.
Years of basic scientific research crosscutting multiple disciplines produces new information on the nanoscale complexities of shale.
By achieving very high density and confinement quality at the same time, researchers make new strides toward fusion energy.
By using a small number of photons to process information, two-dimensional quantum materials can lead to secure, energy-efficient communications.
Scientists used a series of three distinct, sequential reactions to transform carbon monoxide into methanol using proton-electron mediators.
Scientists discover that superconductivity in copper-based materials is linked with fluctuations of ordered electric charge and mobility of vortex matter.
Scientists examine how molecular systems made of nanocrystals and proteins support the production of ammonia using light.
A new calculation helps scientists understand how matter formed out of the hot, dense soup of subatomic particles created by the Big Bang.
Charge radii measurements of silicon isotopes test nuclear theories and guide descriptions of nuclear matter.
Researchers find that the quantum flavor and momentum states of the neutrinos in a supernova are strongly entangled through frequent interactions.
Simulations of massive neutron star merger remnants reveal their structure and early evolution as they cool down by emitting neutrinos.
Leveraging a new genome annotation tool, researchers identified ‘talented’ microorganisms with genes for transforming polyphenols in peatlands.