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Wired January 18, 2008 Paul O'Donnell |
Laser-Firing Physicists Take High-Speed Photography to the Attosecond Range Lasers let physicists take pictures at faster speeds. |
Wired January 18, 2008 Miyoko Ohtake |
Chemist Spins His Cyclotron to Create Impossibly Heavy Metals New research allows mutations of metal elements to include more atoms. |
Popular Mechanics February 2008 Joe Pappalardo |
Plasma Plaything Warms Up for Sun-Level Work on Fusion Fusion reactors -- the near-mythic energy sources that have been on the horizon for half a century -- may be coming one step closer. |
IEEE Spectrum January 2008 Alexander Hellemans |
Thermal Transistor: The World's Tiniest Refrigerator Thermal transistors refrigerate one electron at a time and physicists plan to compute with heat. |
IEEE Spectrum January 2008 Erico Guizzo |
Winner: Solving the Oil Equation A team of geophysicists and computer scientists closes in on the ultimate seismic-imaging code for finding oil. |
Chemistry World December 10, 2007 Killugudi Jayaraman |
Scientists Trap Light in Nano-Soup Physicists in India, have demonstrated how to trap and retrieve light using a soup of micro- and nano-sized magnetic spheres. |
Wired November 27, 2007 Erin Biba |
WTF?! The Positronium Superlaser Is Almost Complete. Muh-ha-ha-ha! Stabilize a matter-antimatter mix into a substance called positronium -- as a couple of physicists did for 100 nanoseconds -- and you're on your way to turning that jolt into a focused, ultrapowerful laser. |
Chemistry World November 1, 2007 Simon Hadlington |
Shaking up Nanofriction US scientists have performed the equivalent of the school-lab experiment of dragging a mass across different surfaces to measure frictional forces - but at the atomic scale. |
Chemistry World October 31, 2007 Lewis Brindley |
Filming the Nanoworld Scientists in the US have upgraded the circuitry on a popular microscopy technique to boost the speed of imaging by about 100 times |
Chemistry World October 29, 2007 Lewis Brindley |
Laser Hits the Right Spot for Chemical Analysis Scientists have developed a 'laser nanoantenna' that could significantly boost the level of detail available to tabletop microscopes. |
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