ScienceDaily: Latest Science News |
- Evacuation during and after the 2018 Montecito debris flow
- Photon-phonon breakthrough
- Sensitive new way of detecting transistor defects
- Taking steps toward more effective fitness trackers, more physical activity
- How plant parents ensure that their kids make it far in life
- A new method for predicting the response of ecosystems to marine heatwaves developed by international collaboration
- Refuting a 70-year approach to predicting material microstructure
Evacuation during and after the 2018 Montecito debris flow Posted: 08 Oct 2021 01:05 PM PDT A new study speaks to the importance of public awareness programs in keeping residents -- and emergency management offices -- informed about rare but potentially lethal natural events in their area. |
Posted: 08 Oct 2021 01:05 PM PDT New research has uncovered a novel way to combine two different states of matter. For one of the first times, topological photons -- light -- has been combined with lattice vibrations, also known as phonons, to manipulate their propagation in a robust and controllable way. |
Sensitive new way of detecting transistor defects Posted: 08 Oct 2021 01:05 PM PDT Researchers have devised and tested a new, highly sensitive method of detecting and counting defects in transistors -- a matter of urgent concern to the semiconductor industry as it develops new materials for next-generation devices. |
Taking steps toward more effective fitness trackers, more physical activity Posted: 08 Oct 2021 01:04 PM PDT As the popularity of fitness trackers has increased, so have the opportunities to use such devices to not only track fitness goals but also increase the motivation to meet those goals. Researchers are using control systems engineering tools to tailor motivational messages sent to individual device users. |
How plant parents ensure that their kids make it far in life Posted: 08 Oct 2021 10:41 AM PDT Researchers have been studying seed dispersal to understand how chemicals impact interactions between fruit and the animals that eat them. |
Posted: 08 Oct 2021 07:57 AM PDT Marine heatwaves, driven by climate change, are becoming more frequent and intense worldwide. Although we know that heatwaves kill marine organisms and have devastating effects on ecosystems, there is currently no way to predict these effects or help ecosystems adapt. |
Refuting a 70-year approach to predicting material microstructure Posted: 07 Oct 2021 11:59 AM PDT Researchers have developed a new microscopy technique that maps material microstructure in three dimensions; results demonstrate that the conventional method for predicting materials' properties under high temperature is ineffective. |
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