[ad_1] Sowing the atmosphere with aerosols would not prevent high concentrations of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere from destabilizing low clouds, opening the door to extreme warming Pumping aerosols into the atmosphere to reflect sunlight, thereby cooling the Earth, is a next-generation method of dealing with climate change. According to …
Read More »UW is part of a $ 5.8 million contract to study wireless charging on the moon
[ad_1] A team of multiple organizations, including UW, plans to develop a line of lightweight, ultra-fast wireless chargers that could help both humans and robots live and work on the moon.Sarah McQuate / University of Washington A challenge to life in space is power: how to keep humans comfortable and …
Read More »The new analytical approach improves the detection of the nuclear magnetic resonance signal
[ad_1] First introduced in wide use in the mid 1920sth century, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) has since become an indispensable technique for examining materials down to their atoms, revealing molecular structure and other details without interfering with the material itself. “It is a widely used technique in chemical analysis, material …
Read More »Quantum tunneling pushes the limits of self-powered sensors
[ad_1] Shantanu Chakrabartty’s laboratory has worked to create sensors that can operate with the least amount of energy. His lab has been so successful in building smaller, more efficient sensors, that they have encountered an obstacle in the form of a fundamental law of physics. Sometimes, however, when you encounter …
Read More »The new technology allows for a more precise view of the smallest nanoparticles
[ad_1] Scientists reported a new optical imaging technology, which uses a glass side coated with gold nanodiscs that allows them to monitor changes in light transmission and determine the characteristics of nanoparticles as small as 25 nanometers in diameter. Current cutting-edge techniques have clear limitations when it comes to visualizing …
Read More »The professor was the victim of a robbery in the middle of the vitutal class, in Brazil – Latin America – International
[ad_1] The virtual encounters we had to migrate to due to the new coronavirus pandemic have been a ‘topic of conversation’ in recent months. During those sessions several funny and funny moments and other embarrassing and rude moments were recorded, what made them viral and everyone is talking about it. …
Read More »The team finds ways to protect genetic privacy in research
[ad_1] (Illustration by Wendolyn Hill) The era of functional genomics has allowed scientists to analyze huge amounts of data on cellular activity in disease and health. The more this data is shared between labs, the more power scientists have to find disease-related genes. This widespread sharing of functional genomics data, …
Read More »The extendable sensor gives robots and virtual reality a human touch
[ad_1] It’s no exaggeration to say that extendable sensors could change the way soft robots work and feel. In fact, they will be able to try quite a lot. Cornell researchers have created a fiber-optic sensor that combines low-cost LEDs and dyes, resulting in a stretchable “skin” that detects deformations …
Read More »The European Space Agency formally adopts Ariel, an exoplanet explorer
[ad_1] The European Space Agency (ESA) has formally adopted Ariel, the first mission dedicated to the study of the nature, formation and evolution of exoplanets. More than 50 institutes from 17 countries, including the University of Oxford, have worked over the past five years to develop the scientific objectives and …
Read More »Birth of the magnetar from a colossal collision potentially seen for the first time
[ad_1] Long ago and throughout the universe, a huge explosion of gamma rays released more energy in half a second than the sun will produce during its 10 billion years of life. After examining the incredibly bright burst with optical, X-ray, near-infrared and radio wavelengths, an astrophysics team led by …
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