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  • News - 2 Apr 2007
    As the electronics industry continues to churn out smaller and slimmer portable devices, manufacturers have been challenged to find new ways to combat the persistent problem of thermal management. New...
  • News - 2 Apr 2007
    Using a microscope and some extreme 'snapshot' photography with shutter speeds only a few nanoseconds long, researchers from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and...
  • News - 2 Apr 2007
    Using a microscope and some extreme “snapshot” photography with shutter speeds only a few nanoseconds long, researchers from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and...
  • News - 23 Mar 2007
    HORIBA Scientific is proud to announce the new FluoroMax®-4 as the replacement to the legendary FluoroMax®-3. With a superb sensitivity of at least 400,000 cps (a 33% improvement) for the...
  • News - 19 Mar 2007
    Micro-electro-mechanical systems, popularly referred to as MEMS, in small electronic devices often fail because of adhesion and stiction – the attractive force between the surfaces of...
  • News - 15 Mar 2007
    Electrons love to zip around metals such as copper, especially if the metal is cooled to temperatures near absolute zero. But if they encounter a magnetic atom (say, iron) during their travels, the...
  • News - 14 Mar 2007
    In experiments with laboratory mice that bear aggressive human breast cancers, UC Davis researchers have used hot nanoprobes to slow the growth of tumors -- without damage to surrounding healthy...
  • News - 14 Mar 2007
    Rod-shaped nanocrystals normally arrange themselves parallel to each other. Researchers at Rice University in Houston, Texas now report in the journal Angewandte Chemie completely unexpected behavior...
  • News - 14 Mar 2007
    Every time you switch on a light bulb, 10 to the power of 15 (a million times a billion) visible photons, the elementary particles of light, are illuminating the room in every second. If that is too...
  • News - 6 Mar 2007
    Superconductivity -- the conduction of electricity with zero resistance -- sometimes can, it seems, become stalled by a form of electronic "gridlock." A possible explanation why is...

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