HEADLINES ARCHIVE

  • Dozens More NASA Patents Released into the Public Domain

    The technologies were developed to advance NASA missions but may have non-aerospace applications and be used by commercial space ventures and other companies free of charge.

  • Daffodils Inspire Design of Stable Structures

    Vortex shedding affects any elongated structure caught in wind or water currents, such as lampposts, high rises and the long vertical pipes used for drilling oil at sea.

  • Bioelectronics Device Detects Alzheimer’s, Cancer, Other Diseases

    A nanometric biosensor promises early diagnosis of Alzheimer’s and some cancers.

  • Water Scarcity "Major Threat" to Growth and Stability

    If countries do not take action to better manage water resources, analysis shows that some regions with large populations could be living with long periods of negative economic growth.

  • Moy Wind Farm Powers Mars' UK Operations with Clean Energy

    The wind farm, owned and operated by Eneco UK, opened in April 2016 and is expected to have an annual output of over 125,000 megawatt-hours, enough electricity to power 34,000 UK homes.

  • Genetic Potential of Oil-Eating Bacteria from BP Spill Decoded

    Scientists catalogued the genes of numerous bacteria from the BP oil spill to figure out how microbes gobble up the complex mix found in oil.

  • Toward Greener Urban Transport

    Increasing traffic congestion and escalating air pollution globally are leading to schemes for encouraging the wider use of public transport.

  • EPA Issues Final Methane Standards for New Oil and Gas Sources

    Methane is the second most prevalent GHG emitted in the U.S. from human activities. Nearly one-third of emissions come from oil production and gas production, transmission and distribution.

  • Roadside Sensors Could Cut Salting Costs

    The sensors utilize WiFi networks to transmit data on road-surface temperatures to local authorities and highways agencies that use it to target precisely where salt is needed.

  • Passive Magnetic Levitation System for Hyperloop Bid

    HTT describes passive magnetic levitation, which was developed by the late Dr. Richard Post at LLNL, as a "cheaper, safer alternative" to an active magnetic levitation system such as MagLev.

  • Safer, Less-Expensive Ultra-Cold Freezers

    In the U.S. alone, eight deaths per year are attributed to nitrogen asphyxiation. With Brunel's technology, gas tanks can be situated safely outside in the open air.

  • Smart Shoes Guide Sightseers

    The smart shoes are connected via Bluetooth to a smartphone app that uses the phone’s GPS to direct the wearer in the direction to walk by triggering small vibrating sensors within the shoe.

  • Real-Time Ship Performance Data Can Boost Fuel Efficiency

    The technology aggregates sensor data tracking meteorological and hydrographic conditions to give a more accurate measurement of ships' overall performance in actual sea conditions.

  • EU’s REACH Called "Threat" to Chemical Innovation

    The most recent controversy targets REACH regulations that require manufacturers to register thousands of chemicals currently on the market.

  • Methane from Lake Boosts Power Production in Rwanda

    Elevated methane levels are harnessed in a 26 MW power plant.

  • Microwaved Nanoribbons May Bolster Oil and Gas Wells

    When cured in place with microwaves emanating from the drill assembly, the composite plugged the microscopic fractures that allow drilling fluid to seep through and destabilize the walls.

  • NASA, FAA Demonstrate Wireless Communication with Aircraft

    The prototype AeroMACS hardware, developed by Hitachi Ltd., is based on WiMAX wireless communication standards but uses different frequencies to enable connectivity on the ground.

  • Machine Learning Accelerates Discovery of New Materials

    Finding new materials has traditionally been guided by trial and error. But with increasing chemical complexity, the combination possibilities are too large for such an approach to be practical.

  • Two Elevator Cabs, One Shaft: 40% More Capacity

    Each twin elevator has its own major mechanical and electrical components but shares the same guide rails and landing doors in a single elevator shaft.

  • A City Car for the Masses

    The total through-life costs for a production equivalent of the vehicle would be 34% less than for a typical “city car.”

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