A New Fluorescent Probe for Protein Interactions More Proof of Outer Membrane Cytochrome Role in Electron Transfer Scientists Show How Bacteria
Move Electrons Across a Membrane
If science can figure out how to
move electrons across silicon, it can teach watchmakers how to tell us the temperature, the weather, the altitude, the day of the week, the direction of magnetic north, and, yes, even the time — all on the face of a single wristwatch.
Not exact matches
The
electrons in the hydrogen would be trapped and
move up and down the bursting pulsar's intense magnetic field lines, but not
across them.
By applying a magnetic field to semiconducting nanowires laid
across a superconductor, you can
move electrons along these wires, creating two points in space that each mimic half an
electron.
As the MMS team reports today in Science, instead of the turbulent swirling of
electrons that some theorists had predicted, researchers found that the
electrons moved in a more concerted way, meandering back and forth
across the magnetopause.
To achieve this the researchers took advantage of the manner in which Fe atoms
move across the surface of graphene when irradiated by
electrons in a transmission
electron microscope (TEM).
The common paradigm used to explain the observation of conductivity at interfaces of materials such as lanthanum aluminate and strontium titanate is that
electrons move across the interface to alleviate the so - called polar catastrophe created by polar / nonpolar interface creation.
Detailed yet accessible text begins with «
electrons on the
move» and explains how electricity is generated at a power plant and travels
across wires to brightly lit homes.
Hawking radiation is based on the well established fact of quantuum tunneling where a particle may disappear at one point in space and reappear at another point without enough energy to have
moved across a barrier from point A to point B. Flash memory chips work by quantuum tunneling where an
electron is raised to an energy level just short of being able to cross a barrier into a holding pen.