Sentences with word «nanoscientist»

Solar and renewable energy is getting hot, thanks to nanoscientists who have discovered new, better, and faster ways to convert energy from light into energetic electrons.
That would make the tool a powerful way for nanoscientists to rapidly and cheaply prototype novel devices, such as new micromechanical diagnostics and unique microelectronic designs.
That's because the thin film of iron loses its magnetic properties above a certain temperature, says von Bergmann, who coauthored the study, along with nanoscientist Roland Wiesendanger of the University of Hamburg and colleagues.
Welland added that the significance of the group's results to date was partly due to the direct collaboration between nanoscientists and clinicians.
This output might suit many applications, such as being a power source for home or office electronics, says co-developer and nanoscientist Zhong Wang of the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta.
Yuste, for example, says that keeping human benefits in mind is important, but he wonders whether the project's original sharp focus on tool development may be diluted if the NIH advisory panel is dominated by traditional neuroscientists, rather than a more interdisciplinary mix of scientists including nanoscientists, optogeneticists, and synthetic biologists.
Halas wins American Physical Society's Lilienfeld Prize: Rice University nanoscientist honored for pioneering research in plasmonics October 23rd, 2017
Systems biologists and nanoscientists from UNM and from Los Alamos National Laboratories will provide additional images showing that life at any size can be breathtakingly beautiful.
The team — led by Professor of Chemical Physics at Trinity, Jonathan Coleman, one of the world's leading nanoscientists — infused rubber bands with graphene, a nano - material derived from pencil lead which is 10,000 times smaller than the width of a human hair.
Encouragement for better manufacturing practices is on its way, including creation of a green nano award that incentivizes nanoscientists to find greener methods for production.
«The yoctogram mass sensitivity achieved by the Catalan team is certainly spectacular the challenge ahead will be to routinely manufacture nanotube sensors at low cost,» says Rachel McKendry, a nanoscientist at University College London.
«A trained scientist understands the broader context, but many segments of the general public may not,» said Seth Darling, a nanoscientist at Argonne National Laboratory who has written a book on communicating climate science to the general public.
«The brain has limited capacity, and it can only function efficiently because it is able to forget,» said Subramanian Sankaranarayanan, an Argonne nanoscientist and study author.
Thomas Thundat, a nanoscientist at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, says the detectors contain an extremely sensitive array of «very miniature diving boards.»
«Sensing interactions between molecules: Nanoscientists have developed an atomically defined probe tip with extraordinary stability which enables them to image molecular structures by atomic force microscopy.»
The creation of triangulene demonstrates a new type of chemical synthesis, says Philip Moriarty, a nanoscientist who specializes in molecular manipulation at the University of Nottingham, UK.
The Kavli Ideas Challenge invites the broad scientific community — including microbiologists, nanoscientists, neuroscientists, engineers, chemists, materials scientists, physicists and others — to submit their ideas for groundbreaking experimental tools and methods for understanding microbial function.
This Ideas Challenge invites the broad scientific community — including microbiologists, nanoscientists, neuroscientists, engineers, chemists, materials scientists, physicists and others — to submit innovative, blue - sky, and aspirational ideas for novel experimental tools and methods for understanding microbial function.
I hope that this is a two - way street and that the nanoscientists are glad of the applications of their work to neuroscience.
This Ideas Challenge recognizes the need for an interdisciplinary approach to microbiome research and invites the scientific community — including microbiologists, ecologists, chemists, physicists, engineers, material scientists, nanoscientists, computational scientists and others — to submit their ideas for novel experimental tools and methods aimed at understanding microbial interactions and function from new perspectives.
In 2011, neuroscientists and nanoscientists had an idea for revolutionizing our understanding the brain.
Nanoscientists, like other scientists, naturally make progress by building on the previous work of colleagues.
The Kavli Ideas Challenge invites the broad scientific community - including microbiologists, nanoscientists, neuroscientists, engineers, chemists, materials scientists, physicists and others - to submit their ideas for groundbreaking experimental tools and methods for understanding microbial function.
Three of those nanoscientists — Eigler, MIT materials scientist Angela Belcher and UC Santa Barbara physicist David Awschalom — joined in a recent teleconference to discuss the upcoming symposium and Feynman's legacy.
Over the past decade, nanoscientists have succeeded in pushing the limits of nanoscale instrumentation.
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