HEADLINES ARCHIVE

  • Researchers Generate 3-D Virtual Reality Models of Unborn Babies

    Parents may soon be able to watch their unborn babies grow, thanks to technology that transforms MRI and ultrasound data into a 3-D virtual reality model of a fetus.

  • Water Behavior when Confined in Carbon Nanotubes

    Researchers have found that inside carbon nanotubes water can freeze solid even at temperatures that would normally make it boil.

  • Fiber Optics Pioneer Wins Tyndall Award

    This award is conferred by the Optical Society and the IEEE Photonics Society and is one of the most prestigious awards the two societies present.

  • "Skin-Like" Biomedical Bandage Is Stretchy, Durable

    The biomedical device mimics the human skin's elastic properties and sensory capabilities.

  • Big Wave Energy Potential Near Australia, Study Finds

    The study concludes that the region has the potential to generate 17 gigawatt-hours of electricity annually from a single wave farm.

  • Flow Accelerated Corrosion: An Ongoing Risk for Steam Generators

    Thirty years after four workers died at a Virginia nuclear power plant, the problem of flow accelerated corrosion remains a concern.

  • Making Red Mud Greener

    About 120 million tons of new red mud waste is produced yearly, which poses environmental risks that include the leaching of harmful chemicals into groundwater.

  • Mcity Opens Access to Advance Auto Research

    Researchers can bring in their own hardware and swap out any sensor or create advanced controls to take advantage of various sensor technologies already on the vehicles.

  • Paper-based Bicycle Helmet Wins 2016 Dyson Award

    EcoHelmet is made of waterproofed paper in a radial honeycomb configuration to protect the head from impact.

  • Mood Ring Materials Could Detect Cracks in Bridges and Aircraft

    Mixing fluorescent nanoparticles and clear polymer resin yields a novel sensor that changes optical properties under stress.

  • Wolfcamp Shale Confirmed as U.S.' Largest Unconventional Oil Field

    USGS says Wolfcamp shale contains an estimated mean of 20 billion barrels of oil, 16 trillion cubic feet of associated natural gas and 1.6 billion barrels of natural gas liquids.

  • Remote Sensing Spots Infrastructure Cracks After Disasters

    The technology includes the camera hardware, mounted to a plane or unmanned aerial vehicle, and the software, which analyzes the pictures taken.

  • Hybrid and Electric Vehicles to Be Required to Emit Audible Sound

    Officials estimates that the sound requirement will help prevent approximately 2,400 pedestrian injuries each year in the U.S. once all hybrid and electric vehicles are properly equipped.

  • Glowing Tumors Help Surgeons Cut Out Brain Cancer

    The technique uses near-infrared imaging and the contrasting agent indocyanine green, which fluoresces a bright green under NIR light.

  • Chips Bridge Gap Between Computation and Storage

    University of Wisconsin–Madison researchers are creating chips that can be configured to perform complex calculations and store massive amounts of information in the same integrated unit.

  • Japan Aims to Build a World-leading Supercomputer

    Japan's proposed Artificial Intelligence Bridging Cloud Infrastructure computer could advance AI research and provide processing power for companies and academic institutions.

  • Bringing Silicon to Life

    A team of scientists at Caltech has "bred" a bacterial protein with the ability to make man-made bonds between silicon and carbon.

  • Solar-powered Thermal Desalination Process

    The graphene absorber is easy to transport, making it potentially attractive to use in remote areas and in developing countries.

  • Video: Worried about the airline losing your luggage? A ten-cent technology could help. Infrastructure failures are likely to grow says a new study. German engineers work to preserve a scenic railway.

    Video: Worried about the airline losing your luggage? A ten-cent technology could help. Infrastructure failures are likely to grow says a new study. And German engineers work to preserve a scenic railway.

  • Surfaces Repel Both Water in Oil and Oil in Water

    To date, the ability to repel water when covered by oil, and oil when covered by water, has been regarded as contradictory.

  • Advertisement
    Advertisement