Similar Articles |
|
Popular Mechanics February 2007 Jy Murphy |
Z Machine: A Particle Accelerator Hotter than the Sun With arcs of current from an electromagnetic pulse crisscrossing metal structures, this extreme machine can melt crystallized stone and unlock some more cosmic mysteries. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics December 2008 Courtney E. Howard |
LSI Upgrades Sandia Supercomputer with Storage Engineers at Sandia National Laboratories are upgrading Red Storm, one of the world's most powerful supercomputers, with high-performance storage. |
National Defense June 2014 Stew Magnuson |
Researchers Tout New Approach to Detecting Smuggled Nuclear Materials Scientists working with spectral X-ray technology said they have a potential new method of foiling smugglers who try to hide small amounts of nuclear material in luggage or shipping containers. |
Chemistry World August 17, 2012 Philip Ball |
Getting under water's skin The surface tension of water is explained in textbooks with pictures showing water molecules pulling each other sideways and downwards at the liquid surface, producing a kind of surface 'skin'. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics October 2005 |
Removable Disk Storage Modules for Extreme Temperature Environments Z Microsystems is offering a rugged, removable TranzPak 7 (TP7) disk-drive module with powerful heaters inside to qualify the device for operating temperatures as low as -32 degrees Celsius with a 35-minute warmup time |
Popular Mechanics January 30, 2008 Logan Ward |
5 Heavy-Duty Supercomputer Science Projects for 2008 The U.S. Department of Energy, owner of two of the world's top 10 fastest computers, is giving away time on seven machines at several of their sites. Here are 5 of the science projects that will get a boost from the supercomputers. |