What CAN It Be?
Elucidating Cerium Solution Chemistry
Elucidating Cerium Solution Chemistry
New technique measures uranium, thorium, and palladium with efficiencies up to 500 times greater than current standard.
New scalable cost-effective ultracold neutron detector has many applications.
Experimental turbulence model matches the magnetic field amplification seen within the remains of a supernova.
Particles colliding at nearly light speed reveal information about the true nature of matter.
The proton's primary building blocks, up and down quarks, are produced more often than strange quarks in scattering experiments.
First-of-its-kind measurements provide insights on reactions that could one day turn sunlight and water into fuels.
Using computational methods, scientists tailor and adapt proteins to mine uranium from seawater.
Direct measurement of an elusive but critical combustion molecule leads to more accurate models of ignition chemistry.
Surface plasmons move at nearly the speed of light and travel farther than expected, possibly leading to faster electronic circuits.
Spectroscopy combined with theory and computation determines the interaction between carbon dioxide and water.
Realistic computational view of how atom stretches informs microscopic description of nuclear energy production.