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Science News March 27, 2004 |
From the March 24, 1934, issue Used to Shooting From Hip, Plainsman Snaps Meteorite... Triple-Weight Element Made as Atoms Yield Energy... Aluminum Mirror is Superior for Movie Photography... |
Science News October 19, 2002 |
TimeLine: October 15, 1932 The saber-tooth strikes... Dangers of dust in industry described at safety congress... Scientist directs huge magnet in attack to smash atom... |
Science News April 14, 2007 |
Timeline: From the April 10, 1937, Issue Eggs of Brook Trout Have Beauty of Pearls... New Clue to Atom's Heart From Artificial Element... |
Science News March 16, 2002 |
TimeLine: March 12, 1932 Scientists unearth new portrait of King Tut's girl-wife... Tapping of the atom's energy achieved in new experiment... Scientists learning secret of how plants manufacture food... |
Science News July 5, 2003 |
From the July 1, 1933, issue Seven mummies from Texas cave brought to Smithsonian... Successes in atom smashing evaluated by Dr. Millikan... Atomic bombardment breaks up more elements |
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. |
Science News May 18, 2002 |
TimeLine: May 14, 1932 Dove orchid makes fitting flower for Whitsunday... New kind of atom smashing liberates millions of volts... Little earthquakes of traffic recorded by tiny seismograph... |
Chemistry World January 27, 2011 Laura Howes |
Muons take kinetic isotope effects to extremes Scientists have used muons, elementary particles similar to electrons, to investigate the effect of isotope identity on one of the most fundamental reactions in chemistry. |
IEEE Spectrum August 2011 Willie D. Jones |
A Fusion Thruster for Space Travel Clean, highly energetic reaction delivers a lot of drive from a drop of fuel. |
Science News August 28, 2004 |
Oklahoma's Mound Builders Wore Fancy Stone Earrings Flashback to 1934: Stone earplugs from a Native American jeweler in Oklahoma... Bathysphere sets a new deep-sea record... Gamma rays split hydrogen atoms... |
Chemistry World January 8, 2014 Philip Ball |
We choose to go to the muon Chemists Mohammad Goli and Shant Shahbazian posit two new light elements. They are muonium (Mu), in which an electron orbits a positively charged muon ( +), and muonic helium (He ), in which an electron orbits a 'nucleus' consisting of an alpha particle and a negative muon. |
Science News January 22, 2005 |
From the January 19, 1935, Issue Girl Twins Repeat Famous Experiment of Jimmy-Johnny... Electric Currents Picked up From Head Show Brain Action... Triple-Weight Hydrogen Made From Lithium Atoms... |
Science News May 12, 2007 |
Timeline: From the May 8, 1937, issue Places last bolt in frame of 200-inch telescope... New form of matter found in cosmic-ray bombardments... Undergraduates plan rocket study with new society... |
Science News April 12, 2003 |
TimeLine: April 8, 1933 Mt. Washington colder than the Antarctic... Energy turned into mass for first time in history... Bacteria replace yeast to make ancient sacred drink |
Scientific American December 2005 W. Wayt Gibbs |
Breaking the Mold As the glass cools on his latest giant mirror, Roger Angel keeps pushing telescope design. His next one might even find Earth-like planets around other stars |
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. |
Science News April 24, 2004 |
From the April 21, 1934, Issue Explorations at Ur Finished; Cemetery Found in Pit Bottom... Mass Three Discoveries Close Gap in Elements... Radio "Echoes" From Moon to be Sought by Thousands... |
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... |
Chemistry World January 10, 2007 Richard Van Noorden |
Atomic Inspection for Nuclear Waste Storage Scientists have announced a new way to assess the safety of storing nuclear waste. Already, the method has shown that the ceramic mineral zircon, a candidate for storing nuclear waste for over 250,000 years, would lose its ordered structure in a far shorter time. |
Science News March 17, 2007 |
Timeline: From the March 13, 1937, issue Snake accepts human aid in shedding his skin... Paraffin lenses concentrate neutrons as glass does light... History of piece of glass affects its physical make-up... |
Popular Mechanics December 3, 2008 Andrew Moseman |
Fringe Pushes Probability to the Limit as Characters Walk Through Walls Fringe loves to toe the line between science fact and fiction, but this time its tilted far over onto the fiction side. |
Chemistry World November 7, 2013 Polly Wilson |
Hydrogen adopts alkali metal position For the first time, scientists have shown that hydrogen can stand in for alkali metals in typical alkali metal structures. |
Popular Mechanics May 2006 |
Large Binocular Telescope The world's most powerful optical telescope will soon be peering at objects that date back to the dawn of time. |
Technology Research News January 15, 2003 Eric Smalley |
Metal stores more hydrogen One reason the world isn't running on hydrogen fuel is that it's hard to store. Researchers from the National University of Singapore have made an accidental discovery that brings the promise of clean hydrogen energy a big step forward. |
Science News July 26, 2003 |
TimeLine: July 22, 1933 Perkins Observatory 69-inch mirror is third largest... Find eggs that were fresh a million years ago... Cancer susceptibility depends on single gene |
Science News August 23, 2003 |
TimeLine: August 19, 1933 Construction begun on 80-inch Texas telescope... Spot larger than earth breaks out on Saturn... Artificial blood in dogs shows red cells guard hemoglobin |
Chemistry World October 6, 2014 Tim Wogan |
Solar wind whips up water on moon The volcanic glasses from the moon's soil let the scientists rule out other ways that water might have been created |
Scientific American May 2009 George Musser |
Mapping the Universe with Helium A new way to squeeze information from the microwave background. |
Scientific American November 2008 George Musser |
New Quantum Weirdness: Balls That Don't Roll Off Cliffs Quantum particles continue to behave in ways traditional particles do not |