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The aim is to demonstrate improved methods of phonon transport—for example, for use in microchips, where phonons are directed through tight bends. The research is published in the journal Nature.
His beautiful coffee table book, Patterns in Nature: Why The Natural World Looks The Way It Does (University of Chicago Press, 2017), takes a fascinating and in-depth look into why and how natural ...
Researchers successfully freeze light into a supersolid, a groundbreaking discovery with potential applications in quantum ...
Physicists at the University of Liège have succeeded in sculpting the surface of water by exploiting surface tension. Using ...
The wetland diet of adult flamingos—algae, brine fly larvae, and brine shrimp—is so rich in the red-orange beta-carotene ...
The researchers believe this marks the first time a light absorbing and reflecting feature was documented on the exterior of ...
Researchers at Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin look for new cancer diagnostic procedures. The result is an AI model that makes use of the specific characteristics in the genetic material of ...
Imagine navigating virtual worlds, executing complex maneuvers, and even racking up high scores — all without lifting a ...