UCLA chemists proved that some of chemistry’s oldest rules can be broken—and new molecules emerge when they are.
A doctoral student recreated a tiny piece of the universe in a bottle to investigate the chemistry that led to life on Earth.
INTA, using modeling techniques developed at the University of Oxford, has uncovered an unprecedented richness of small ...
Silicone glove coatings flow into the rough surface of a football when it’s caught and create a larger contact area. But because its adhesion per unit of surface area is low, silicone releases its ...
After a successful pilot test of another resource-sharing platform in 2023 and 2024, UAB Sustainability is excited to bring ...
Researchers at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory are breathing new life into the scientific ...
Supra, a UT Austin spinout, makes 3D printed cartridges that could help build a new supply chain for rare earth elements in ...
Modern Engineering Marvels on MSN
A student brewed stardust in a glass tube and it changes how “life’s ingredients” travel
What would it take to cease the waiting of space rocks and be able to make the chemistry where we need it? Ph.D. student ...
A Sydney Ph.D. student has recreated a tiny piece of the universe inside a bottle in her laboratory, producing cosmic dust ...
Recreating cosmic dust may help answer questions about how meteorites hitting Earth came to contain the organic matter that they do ...
By creating a 'little bit of the Universe in a bottle' in her lab, a PhD student in physics has reverse-engineered the ...
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