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Science News July 20, 2002 |
TimeLine: July 16, 1932 Canadian research building ready for use at Ottawa... Double-weight hydrogen found in water electrolysis... Cosmic-ray intensity varies with change in latitude |
Science News January 21, 2006 |
From the January 18, 1936, Issue Scientists Shown Model of Second-Largest Telescope... Relief for Angina Pectoris, "Most Painful" Disease... Lightest Solid Ever Found Made at Bartol Laboratories... |
Science News December 22, 2001 |
From the December 19 & 26, 1931, issues Santa Claus Cavalrymen Bestride Strange Steeds... Hydrogen Atoms of Twice Usual Weight are Discovered... Standing Audience Improves Building Acoustics One-Fourth... Loot From Half of Country Brought to One State... Cold Storage Does Not Harm Vitamin C of Apples... Minute Objects in Cells May be Heredity Carriers... |
Science News September 24, 2005 |
From the September 21, 1935, issue The opening of the Hayden Planetarium of the American Museum of Natural History in New York City... British Association for the Advancement of Science announces concentration of heavy neon... British astronomer and cosmologist says age of universe is at least 10,000-billion years... |
Chemistry World January 6, 2016 Jon Cartwright |
Graphene sieves deuterium from hydrogen Materials composed of a single layer of atoms, such as graphene, can separate hydrogen and deuterium more effectively than almost any other process. |
Chemistry World February 27, 2014 Simon Hadlington |
Quantum tunnelling sparks chemistry on cold surfaces Chemistry in deep space could be more diverse than thought after the discovery that larger atoms can quantum tunnel. |
Reactive Reports Issue 37 David Bradley |
X-rays Reveal PSII Secret The possibility of using solar energy and water as a cheap source of hydrogen and oxygen is a step closer thanks to British researchers who discovered how the photosynthetic centre in a cyanobacterium works. |
Popular Mechanics April 1, 2008 Chris Ladd |
Nano Tanks Could Store Hydrogen in Microscopic 'Soccer Balls' While hydrogen gas and fuel cells remain far-off realities for solving the fuel crunch, new computer models of interlocked carbon chambers have proven to store hydrogen at similar pressures to the cores of huge planets. |