(Translated by https://www.hiragana.jp/)
ScienceDaily: Matter & Energy News
The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20070218122514/http://www.sciencedaily.com:80/news/matter_energy/

Matter & Energy News

 RSS  newsfeed for this page:


Latest News

Health & Medicine

Mind & Brain

Plants & Animals

Earth & Climate

Space & Time

Matter & Energy

Chemistry
Electricity
Energy Technology
Engineering
Physics

Computers & Math

Fossils & Ruins

From the news wires ...


Science news stories ...

Summaries | Headlines

Scientists Unveil Piece Of HIV Protein That May Be Key To AIDS Vaccine Development (February 18, 2007) -- In a finding that could have profound implications for AIDS vaccine design, researchers led by a team at the NIAID have generated an atomic-level picture of a key portion of an HIV surface protein as ... > full story

Biochip Allows Genes To Express Themselves (February 18, 2007) -- Biochip platforms that work as artificial cells are attractive for medical diagnostics, interrogation of biological processes, and for the production of important biomolecules. In a major ... > full story

Clock Comparison Yields Clues To 'Constant' Change (February 18, 2007) -- Years of comparisons among the world's best atomic clocks -- based on different atoms -- have established the most precise limits ever achieved in the laboratory for detecting possible changes in ... > full story

Theory Aims To Describe Fundamental Properties Of Materials (February 18, 2007) -- Gold is shiny, diamonds are transparent and iron is magnetic. Why is that? The answer lies with a team of researchers at Sandia National Laboratories about a material's electronic structure, which ... > full story

High-frequency Cryocooler Is Tiny, Cold And Efficient (February 18, 2007) -- A new cryogenic refrigerator has been demonstrated at NIST that operates at twice the usual frequency, achieving a long-sought combination of small size, rapid cooling, low temperatures and high ... > full story

Artificial Retina Could Help Blind Regain Partial Sight (February 17, 2007) -- Patients who have gone blind are a step closer to perhaps one day regaining some of their sight. Researchers at the USC Doheny Eye Institute announced the next step in their efforts to advance ... > full story

Making Operating Rooms Safer With Open Communication Among Equipment (February 17, 2007) -- New research at the University of New Hampshire aims to make hospital operating rooms safer by opening the lines of communication between computerized hospital beds and blood pressure ... > full story

Scientists See DNA Get 'Sunburned' For The First Time (February 16, 2007) -- For the first time, scientists have observed DNA being damaged by ultraviolet (UV) light. Chemists used a special technique to watch strands of DNA in the laboratory sustain damage in real time. They ... > full story

Molecules Under The Hammer (February 16, 2007) -- How do you get information from a preparation that is transparent? How can you still see a three-dimensional image through a microscope? Dutch researcher Rajesh S. Pillai investigated a new way of ... > full story

Quantum Hall Effect Observed At Room Temperature (February 16, 2007) -- An international team of scientists is able to see the "shimmering quantum world" at ambient temperatures with the help of high magnetic fields and a fascinating material called ... > full story

Nanotube, Heal Thyself: Atomic Blemishes Move, Repairing Molecular Skin In Their Wake (February 16, 2007) -- Pound for pound, carbon nanotubes are stronger and lighter than steel, but unlike other materials, the miniscule carbon cylinders remain remarkably robust even when chunks of their bodies are blasted ... > full story

Quantum Effects Writ Large: Evidence Points To Quantum Nature Of Large-scale Effects (February 16, 2007) -- A team of physicists from Rice University, Rutgers University, and the Max Planck Institute for Chemical Physics of Solids in Dresden, Germany, reports this week in the journal Science the discovery ... > full story

< more recent summaries | earlier summaries >

 
 

New! Search Science Daily or the entire web with Google:

Google
 
Web ScienceDaily.com


 

 

Edwin Hubble -- Edwin Powell Hubble (November 20, 1889 - September 28, 1953) was an American astronomer, noted for his discovery of galaxies beyond the Milky Way and the cosmological redshift. Edwin Hubble was one ... > full article

Chemistry -- Chemistry is the science that deals with the properties of organic and inorganic substances and their interactions with other organic and inorganic substances. In the study of matter, chemistry also ... > full article

Military aviation -- Military aviation is used to attack or defend a country through the sky. There are many types of military aircraft, but the basic types of military aircraft are bombers, fighters, Fighter bombers, ... > full article

Turbulence -- In fluid dynamics, turbulence or turbulent flow is a flow regime characterized by chaotic, stochastic property changes. This includes low momentum diffusion, high momentum convection, and rapid ... > full article

Sonic boom -- A sonic boom is the audible component of a shock wave in air. The term is commonly used to refer to the air shocks caused by the supersonic flight of military aircraft or passenger transports such as ... > full article

Shock wave -- In a supersonic flow the compression of a nonreacting gas can be most simply modelled as an isentropic or Prandtl-Meyer compression, or as a shock wave. When an object (or disturbance) moves faster ... > full article

Concorde -- The Aerospatiale-BAC Concorde supersonic transport (SST) was one of only two models of supersonic passenger airliners to have seen commercial service. Concorde had a cruise speed of Mach 2.02 (around ... > full article

Carbon dioxide -- Carbon dioxide is a chemical compound composed of one carbon and two oxygen atoms. It is often referred to by its formula CO2. It is present in the Earth's atmosphere at a low concentration and acts ... > full article

Ultraviolet -- Ultraviolet (UV) radiation is electromagnetic radiation of a wavelength shorter than that of the visible region, but longer than that of soft X-rays. The Sun emits ultraviolet radiation in the UVA, ... > full article

Solar wind -- A solar wind is a stream of charged particles (i.e., a plasma) which are ejected from the upper atmosphere of a star. When originating from stars other than the Earth's Sun, it is sometimes called a ... > full article

Beyond Oil : The View from Hubbert's Peak
With world oil production about to peak and inexorably head toward steep decline, what fuels are available to meet rising global energy demands? That question, once thought to address a fairly ... > read more

The End of Oil : On the Edge of a Perilous New World
The End of Oil is a "geologic cautionary tale for a complacent world accustomed to reliable infusions of cheap energy." The book centers around one irrefutable fact: the global supply of oil is being ... > read more

Chemistry for Dummies
Includes examples of chemistry in action in everyday life See how chemistry works in everything from soaps to medicines to petroleum Whether you re taking a chemistry course or you re curious about ... > read more

Photovoltaics : Design and Installation Manual
Producing electricity from the sun using photovoltaic (PV) systems has become a major industry worldwide. But designing, installing and maintaining such systems requires knowledge and training, and ... > read more

Chemistry: The Central Science, Ninth Edition
The acknowledged leader and standard in general chemistry, this book maintains its effective and proven features—clarity of writing, scientific integrity, currency, strong exercises, visual ... > read more

The Porphyrin Handbook (10-Volume Set)
Scientists in such fields as mathematics, physics, chemistry, biochemistry, biology, and medicine are currently involved in investigations of porphyrins and their numerous analogues and derivatives. ... > read more

Chemistry for Changing Times, 10th Edition
This popular book, now in its 10th edition, is a useful and interesting read for the layperson, as it is colorful, conversational in tone, and easily understandable. Knowledge of chemistry leads to ... > read more

The Solar House: Passive Heating and Cooling
Passive solar heating and passive cooling—approaches known as natural conditioning—provide comfort throughout the year by reducing, or eliminating, the need for fossil fuel. Yet while heat ... > read more

The Chemist's Companion: A Handbook of Practical Data, Techniques, and References
The Chemist s Companion A Handbook of Practical Data, Techniques, and References Arnold J. Gordon and Richard A. Ford Contents Properties of Molecular Systems Properties of Solvents and Common ... > read more

Fundamentals of General, Organic, and Biological Chemistry
This book provides sufficient detail without overloading the reader with details that might be unnecessary to attain basic understanding of the subject matter. A new chapter on genomics is a timely ... > read more

 
Text: small | med | large
Find a Job
Keywords:
Location:
Job category:
> more
 

In Other News ...

... more breaking news at NewsDaily -- updated every 15 minutes

Health & Medicine Mind & Brain Plants & Animals Space & Time Earth & Climate Matter & Energy Computers & Math Fossils & Ruins