Diamonds are famous for their strength, but scientists have long suspected that another form of diamond might be even harder.
In this week’s Tech Tuesday, our partners at UF Innovate and SCAD Media highlight nuclear fuel research at the . Led by Dr.
The quadropole of magnets that guide electrons used to produce X-rays in SPring-8-II © 2026 RIKEN The large-scale synchrotron ...
Researchers at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory used artificial intelligence to analyze protein nanoribbons, pointing to ...
Concentrated rivers of current create flickering hotspots in conventional amorphous OLEDs, but crystalline designs may not have this problem.
Research shows that combining silica fume, fly ash, and manufactured sand in concrete significantly boosts strength and enhances predictive modeling accuracy.
Researchers at The Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids) have uncovered how the bacteria that causes tuberculosis fuels itself during infection, providing new insights into one of the world's ...
A prehistoric Equisetum horsetail plant that survived 400 million years produces oxygen isotopes and water with an extreme ...
New experimental results have cast doubt on earlier proposals suggesting that spherical, cell-like membranes could form in ...
The pixels in phone screens and other OLED displays appear to provide a uniform glow, but a team of University of Michigan ...
Handling air-sensitive materials such as lithium-ion battery compounds or reactive metals presents a significant challenge ...
Scientists at Caltech have figured out how to precisely engineer tiny three-dimensional (3D) metallic pieces with nanoscale ...