The winners of the 2014 Kavli Prize in Nanoscience — Thomas Ebbesen, Stefan Hell and Sir John Pendry — discuss new ways of seeing and
how nanoscience is reinventing light.
Microbiome & Nanoscience:
How Nanoscience Can Help Us Understand Nature's Many Microbiomes and Learning from Earth's Smallest Ecosystems (Webcast)
This roundtable looks at
how nanoscience may be able to help us tease apart how the members of these natural microbiomes interact with one another.
Not exact matches
PhD student Joana Guerreiro has taken part in developing a sensor, which - by using
nanoscience - can measure
how we experience the feeling of dryness in wine.
Researchers from IMDEA
Nanoscience, the Autonomous University of Madrid, the Madrid Institute of Materials Science (CSIC) and the University of the Basque Country describe in the journal Nature Physics this week
how to create a powerful magnetic field using this new material.
These processes are very diverse and varied, and researchers have used atomic force microscopy and similar
nanoscience tools to understand
how those electrons flow at the atomic scale.
Nanoscience has a role in understanding
how those microbes talk to plants,
how they share metabolites, and what regulates nitrogen fixation.
Researchers from the Kavli Institute of
Nanoscience at Delft University and EMBL Heidelberg now managed for the first time to isolate and film the process, and witnessed — in real time —
how a single protein complex called condensin reels in DNA to extrude a loop.
In making their award, the Kavli
Nanoscience Prize committee has selected a scientist whose work, over more than five decades, has improved understanding of
how and why the thermal, electrical, and other characteristics of materials structured at the nanoscale can be dramatically different from those of the same materials at larger dimensions.
For the past two decades, the winners of the 2014 Kavli Prize in
Nanoscience have been using nanotechnology to reimagine
how we might see beyond this limit.
Now, 51 years after Feyman proposed «There's Plenty of Room at the Bottom» for science to discover, researchers in
nanoscience and nanotechnology are gathering to imagine
how this young field may change in the next half a century — and in the process, also change our world.