Meanwhile, a new technique has allowed a separate team
led by physicists at Stockholm University to map the unique way supercooled liquid water fluctuates between two states — both of them liquid, just different kinds.
An international team of researchers
led by physicists at the University of Basel have been studying the lubricity of this material on the nanometer scale.
The Bell team,
led by physicists Ananth Dodabalapur and Zhenan Bao, report in APL that they made a similar transistor but then crafted an organic LED along side.
A team
led by physicists Norman Booth of the University of Oxford, United Kingdom, and Antonio Barone of the University of Naples, Italy, have constructed such a transistor out of ultrathin layers of superconductors, insulators, and normal metals.
Project Blue Book was shut down in 1969 after a rigorous study
led by the physicist Edward Condon concluded that UFO sightings all had mundane, nonthreatening explanations.
Now a team
led by physicist Andre Clairon of the Paris Observatory in France has stretched out the interaction time drastically by using a trick with two laser beams to launch a single «ball» of 600,000 cesium atoms into a vacuum.
ARPA — E also gave $ 4.4 million in October 2009 to a group
led by physicist George Hadjipanayis of the University of Delaware to create a nanostructured version of the neodymium iron boron magnet that eliminates the need for as much neodymium.
Led by physicist Roberto Serra of the Federal University of ABC in Santo André, Brazil, the experimenters manipulated molecules of chloroform, which are made of carbon, hydrogen and chlorine atoms.
The team —
led by physicist Andrew Turberfield and chemist Bob Denning, both of the University of Oxford, United Kingdom — started by building photoresist films thick enough to carve a 3D matrix out of.
Now, a team
led by physicist Yimei Zhu at the U.S. Department of Energy's Brookhaven National Laboratory has produced definitive evidence that the movement of electrons has a direct effect on atomic arrangements, driving deformations in a material's 3D crystalline lattice in ways that can drastically alter the flow of current.
So in the new study, researchers
led by physicist Duncan Forgan of the University of St. Andrews in Fife, U.K., focused on the regions far from a galaxy's center.
For several years, the «Molecular Imaging» research group at the FMP
led by physicist Leif Schröder has been developing new MRI methods that rely on just such a «flux compensator» and has demonstrated the impressive potential of this method.
The team was
led by physicist Michelle Simmons of the University of New South Wales and electrical engineer Gerhard Klimeck of Purdue University.
The researchers —
led by physicist Francesco Bonaccorso, who is based at the Graphene Labs of the Italian Institute of Technology in Genova, and is a Royal Society Newton Fellow at the Cambridge Graphene Centre — note the substantial progress made in material preparation at the laboratory level.
A team from the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena
led by physicist King - Fai Li wondered if there was any way to stop this potential catastrophe.
Researchers
led by physicist Daniel Goldman of the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta, found a happy medium.
Technically that's called crumpling, and a team at the University of Chicago
led by physicist Tom Witten has been studying the process for years.
But researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT),
led by physicist Marin Soljacic, think using magnetic fields to induce a current in a distant device is the most promising approach.
Last year, a group
led by physicist Paul McEuen at Cornell University in Ithaca, NY, created complex cuts and folds in graphene, a process which they likened to kirigami, the Japanese art of paper cutting.
A combination of PPPL modeling
led by physicist Gerrit Kramer and DIII - D experiments has found that broadening the electric current in the center of plasma could reduce the loss of crucial elements called alpha particles that heat the plasma and sustain fusion reactions.
Also selected to participate in Cori's NERSC Exascale Science Applications Program (NESAP) is the PPPL - led M3D - CI, an extended magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) code focused on simulation of plasma disruptions
led by physicist Stephen Jardin, with support from physicists Joshua Breslau, Nate Ferraro and Jin Chen.
U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) high - performance computer sites have selected a dynamic fusion code,
led by physicist C.S. Chang of the DOE's Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL), for optimization on three powerful new supercomputers.
By Joseph D'Aleo In the LA Times, there was a story on Richard Muller's invitation to DC to testify to congress about the Berkeley Project, which attempts to reconstruct global dataThe Berkeley Earth Surface Temperature study is
led by physicist Richard Muller, a longtime critic of the scientific consensus on climate change, who plans to -LSB-...]
A 100 % renewable energy transition globally by 2050 is both technological possible and will reduce the average cost of energy by 30 % from current fossil fuel and nuclear power prices according to a comprehensive 2017 study of the European Energy Watch Group
led by physicist and German PV pioneer Hans - Josef Fell and performed by Berlin's Lappeenranta University of Technology.
Not exact matches
I want to know if they think
physicist Paul Davie is right about the obvious creation of universe governing physical laws, if Einstein was right in a God presence and what they think about quantum mechanics that goes back to von Neumann, where one is
led by its logic (as Wigner and Peierls were) to the conclusion that not everything is just matter in motion.
Space
Physicists led by Lancaster University used data to show that Cassini had passed through the region at Saturn where magnetic reconnection was occurring, which has never before been observed.
«Our research shows for the first time that classical systems such as artificial spin ice can be designed to demonstrate topological ordered phases, which previously have been found only in quantum conditions,» said Los Alamos National Laboratory
physicist Cristiano Nisoli, leader of the theoretical group that collaborated with an experimental group at the University of Illinois at Urbana - Champaign,
led by Peter Schiffer (now at Yale University).
The National Eclipse Ballooning Project,
led by Angela Des Jardins, a solar
physicist at Montana State University in Bozeman, will launch over 100 weather balloons at various times along the path of totality and measure changes in such parameters as temperature and wind speed.
The research
leading to the recent publication in Nature Physics was performed
by a team of researchers from Dresden and Mainz around the theoretical
physicist Dr. Binghai Yan and the experimental chemists Professor Martin Jansen and Professor Claudia Felser.
A team of
physicists led by Rockefeller University fellow Tyler Shendruk recently detected a telling mathematical signature inscribed in that disintegration from order to chaos.
They were
led by Chris Wehrenberg, a
physicist at the DOE's Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, and described in a recent paper in Nature.
Physicists struggling to reconcile gravity with quantum mechanics have hailed a theory — inspired
by pencil
lead — that could make it all very simple
According to a recent study
led by Gábor Horváth, a biological
physicist at Eötvös University in Hungary, cave painters understood — better than many artists of the modern age — the laws governing animal motion.
Federico Capasso, a
physicist at Harvard,
leads a small team that is trying to create a repulsive Casimir force
by tinkering with the shapes of plates or with the coatings used to cover them.
Titanium is the
leading material for artificial knee and hip joints because it's strong, wear - resistant and nontoxic, but an unexpected discovery
by Rice University
physicists shows that the gold standard for artificial joints can be improved with the addition of some actual gold.
A group of LMU
physicists led by Professor Erwin Frey, in collaboration with Professor Stefan Diez (Technical University of Dresden and Max Planck Institute for Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics, Dresden), has now developed a model in which the motor proteins that are responsible for the transport of cargo along protofilaments also serve to regulate microtubule lengths.
Now, an international collaboration of
physicists led by Dr. Eleftherios Goulielmakis, head of the research group «Attoelectronics» at the Max Planck Institute of Quantum Optics, researchers from Texas A&M University, USA, and the Lomonosov Moscow State University, have been able to track the effect of this delay for the first time.
A team
led by theoretical
physicist J. - C.
The new capability, developed
by physicist Mario Podestà at the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL), outfits the code known as TRANSP with a subprogram that simulates the motion that
leads to the loss of energetic ions caused
by instabilities in the plasma that fuels fusion reactions.
Measuring their actual distances
led to the discovery that the universe is expanding at an accelerating rate (SN: 8/6/16, p. 10), which
physicists explain
by invoking a mysterious substance called dark energy.
Led by University of Glasgow
physicist Patrick Spradlin, the LHCb team found evidence of more than 300 of the new particles in data collected last year
by the experiment, teasing out their signals from a dense forest of more common particles produced
by high - energy proton collisions at the LHC.
The new atom counter, named Atom Trap Trace Analysis, or ATTA, was developed
by a team of nuclear
physicists led by Zheng - Tian Lu at Argonne National Laboratory near Chicago.
This is both harming the UK's research base and causing recruitment and retention difficulties for universities,» according to the report
led by Sir Gareth Roberts, a Welsh
physicist.
Physicist Ferenc Krausz, who
led the project, plans to go further: «We believe that we should get down to 100 attoseconds
by the end of the year.»
A team
led by atomic
physicist Lene Vestergaard Hau of the Rowland Institute for Science and Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, found that light moved 20 million times more sluggishly through the tiny condensate than it does through a vacuum.
Now, a team
led by Jens Gundlach, a
physicist at the University of Washington, Seattle, reports today in Nature Biotechnology that it has incorporated Akeson's phi29 protein into its nanopore setup, which uses a different pore protein that's more adept at quickly identifying all four chemical bases.
In 2013, a group
led by statistical
physicist Albert - László Barabási of Northeastern University in Boston found that they could predict the future citation rate of any given paper
by calculating the trajectory of its existing citations.
Yesterday, a team
led by Iowa State University
physicist Paul Canfield reported on the Los Alamos site that they've already made superconducting MgB2 wires.
LLNL nuclear weapon
physicist Gregg Spriggs is
leading a team of film experts, code developers and interns on a mission to hunt down, scan and reanalyze what they estimate to be 10,000 films of the 210 atmospheric tests conducted
by the U.S. between 1945 and 1962.
Recently
physicists led by Per Delsing of the Chalmers University of Technology in Sweden created such a mechanical ear, which could soon tune in on the phonon's minuscule notes.