'It's amazing' – the wonder material very few can make
Just a handful of companies can make cadmium zinc telluride, a material with powerful properties.
- BBC Technology - ScienceReal-time analysis of this week's Science news with AI sentiment analysis. Track emotional impact, happiness levels, chaos indicators and societal temperature of breaking Science stories. Page 29 of results.
Just a handful of companies can make cadmium zinc telluride, a material with powerful properties.
- BBC Technology - ScienceDian Fossey was a zoologist who spent decades studying the elusive mountain gorillas of Congo and Rwanda before she was murdered.
- Latest from Live Science - ScienceNASA NASA's Mars Curiosity rover has measured a tenfold spike in methane, an organic chemical, in the atmosphere around it and detected other organic molecul
- RealClearScience - Homepage - ScienceUC Santa Barbara physicists have engineered entangled spin systems in diamond that surpass classical sensing limits through quantum squeezing. Their breakthroug
- Computers & Math News -- ScienceDaily - ScienceIf you rang in the new year with a kiss, you took part in a tradition millions of years in the making. Scientists now say the origins of kissing go back much fa
- CBS news - ScienceSQUIRE aims to detect exotic spin-dependent interactions using quantum sensors deployed in space, where speed and environmental conditions vastly improve sensit
- Technology News -- ScienceDaily - SciencePhysicists have unveiled a new superconducting detector sensitive enough to hunt dark matter particles smaller than electrons. By capturing faint photon signals
- Technology News -- ScienceDaily - ScienceA Hiroshima University team has designed a feasible way to detect the Unruh effect, where acceleration turns quantum vacuum fluctuations into observable particl
- Technology News -- ScienceDaily - ScienceA pioneering team at the University of Maryland has captured the first-ever images of atomic thermal vibrations, unlocking an unseen world of motion within two-
- Technology News -- ScienceDaily - ScienceCambridge researchers have engineered a solar-powered “artificial leaf” that mimics photosynthesis to make valuable chemicals sustainably. Their biohybrid d
- Technology News -- ScienceDaily - ScienceAngiosperms, also known as flowering plants, represent the most diverse group of seed plants, and their origin and evolution have long been a central question i
- Phys.org - latest science and technology news stories - ScienceThree species of the melodic African warbler bird refuse to get up early and sing their customary daybreak songs when the weather is cold. This new discovery wa
- Phys.org - latest science and technology news stories - ScienceThe protein p53, best known as the "guardian of the genome" for its role in preventing cancer, can affect blood vessels in different ways. However, it has not b
- Phys.org - latest science and technology news stories - ScienceWhere do the well-known cannabis compounds THC, CBD and CBC come from? Researchers at Wageningen University & Research have experimentally demonstrated for the
- Phys.org - latest science and technology news stories - ScienceEvery day, millions of people use thermal paper without thinking about it. Receipts, shipping labels, tickets, and medical records all rely on heat‑sensitive
- Phys.org - latest science and technology news stories - ScienceThe ecology of the North Atlantic is constantly changing. Sometimes it changes abruptly. Extreme events are one driver of such sudden changes. A team of researc
- Phys.org - latest science and technology news stories - ScienceAntarctic icefish are famous for living without red blood cells, but they are not alone. A species of needle-shaped, warm-water fish called the Asian noodlefish
- Phys.org - latest science and technology news stories - ScienceWhen quantum particles work together, they can produce signals far stronger than any one particle could generate alone. This collective phenomenon, called super
- Phys.org - latest science and technology news stories - ScienceEver bitten into a hot pie, yelped "Hothothot!" then had your taste buds go on strike for the next week? Taste buds are a sensitive bunch.
- Phys.org - latest science and technology news stories - ScienceIn recent decades, scientists have debated whether a seven-million-year-old fossil was bipedal—a trait that would make it the oldest human ancestor. A new ana
- Phys.org - latest science and technology news stories - ScienceAnalyzing sentiment data...