You are here

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed

Subscribe to Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed feed Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed
Detectors and electronics. Learn about every sort of detector, radar system and more from leading research institutes around the world.
Updated: 8 hours 2 min ago

Foraging footballers suggest how we come together to act as one

Mon, 03/10/2025 - 10:07pm
Originally described in the context of particles drifting through liquid, Levy walk has been found to accurately describe a very wide range of phenomena, from cold atom dynamics to swarming bacteria. And now, a new study has found Levy walk in the movements of competing groups of organisms: football teams.
Categories: Science

Building bridges in physics

Mon, 03/10/2025 - 7:46pm
Researchers show that Cartan's First Structure Equation, which relates to edge and screw dislocations in crystal lattices, can be recast in the same form as a basic mathematical formula that governs the behavior of electric currents and magnetic fields. This work can help make new concepts more understandable by employing more familiar frameworks.
Categories: Science

Clothes dryers and the bottom line: Switching to air drying can save hundreds

Mon, 03/10/2025 - 5:17pm
By replacing clothes dyers with line drying, households in the U.S. could save upwards of $2,100 and avoid 3 tons of carbon dioxide emissions over the lifetime of a dryer. The exact impacts, however, depend on what kind of dryer you have and where you live, new research shows.
Categories: Science

Receiving low-glucose alerts improves diabetic drivers' safety on the road

Mon, 03/10/2025 - 10:43am
A Japanese study has found that the use of continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) devices, equipped with sensors that alert diabetics when their blood sugar levels drop, can potentially make diabetic drivers safer on the road. Those who used the devices had lower incidences of low blood sugar and reported increased confidence in driving.
Categories: Science

The two faces of liquid water

Mon, 03/10/2025 - 10:42am
Scientists have uncovered a key finding to one of water's unique properties: at high pressure and low temperature, liquid water separates into two distinct liquid phases -- one high-density and one low-density.
Categories: Science

Are volcanoes behind the oxygen we breathe?

Mon, 03/10/2025 - 10:42am
It is widely believed that Earth's atmosphere has been rich in oxygen for about 2.5 billion years due to a relatively rapid increase in microorganisms capable of performing photosynthesis. Researchers provide a mechanism to explain precursor oxygenation events, or 'whiffs,' which may have opened the door for this to occur. Their findings suggest volcanic activity altered conditions enough to accelerate oxygenation, and the whiffs are an indication of this taking place.
Categories: Science

Evidence of a new phenomenon: Quantum tornadoes in momentum space

Mon, 03/10/2025 - 10:41am
Researchers have experimentally demonstrated a quantum tornado. Electrons form vortices in the momentum space of the quantum semi-metal tantalum arsenide.
Categories: Science

X-ray snapshot: How light bends an active substance

Mon, 03/10/2025 - 10:18am
With the help of the world's most powerful X-ray laser, a research team has achieved an important breakthrough: Using the example of the pharmaceutically active substance 2-thiouracil, they applied a long-established imaging technique to complex molecules. Although 2-thiouracil is no longer applied therapeutically, it is part of a group of chemically similar active substances that are used today as immunosuppressants or cytostatics. The study shows how UV radiation deforms 2-thiouracil, making it dangerously reactive.
Categories: Science

Unlocking the secrets of phase transitions in quantum hardware

Mon, 03/10/2025 - 10:17am
Researchers have achieved a remarkable result: capturing and studying phase changes in quantum hardware, which hold hold promise for next-generation technologies like quantum computing and ultra-sensitive sensors.
Categories: Science

New technique overcomes spurious correlations problem in AI

Mon, 03/10/2025 - 10:17am
AI models often rely on 'spurious correlations,' making decisions based on unimportant and potentially misleading information. Researchers have now discovered these learned spurious correlations can be traced to a very small subset of the training data and have demonstrated a technique that overcomes the problem.
Categories: Science

'Nanodot' control could fine-tune light for sharper displays, quantum computing

Mon, 03/10/2025 - 10:16am
Newly achieved precise control over light emitted from incredibly tiny sources, a few nanometers in size, embedded in two-dimensional materials could lead to remarkably high-resolution monitors and advances in ultra-fast quantum computing, according to an international team.
Categories: Science

Stretching spider silk makes it stronger

Fri, 03/07/2025 - 11:47am
When they weave their webs, spiders pull their silk threads. New simulations show stretching during spinning causes the protein chains within the fibers to align and the number of hydrogen bonds between those chains to increase. Both factors increase the silk fibers' overall strength and toughness. Insights could be applied to designing stronger, tougher synthetic materials.
Categories: Science

Security veins: Advanced biometric authentication through AI and infrared

Fri, 03/07/2025 - 10:01am
A researcher succeeded developing highly accurate biometric authentication based on images of the palms of hands taken with a hyperspectral camera.
Categories: Science

Developing the inherent functionality of highly pure porous organic polymers

Fri, 03/07/2025 - 10:01am
Soaking up pollutants like a sponge, porous organic polymers (POPs) may be the key to reducing greenhouse gas emissions, according to researchers.
Categories: Science

Researchers create gel that can self-heal like human skin

Fri, 03/07/2025 - 10:01am
Until now, artificial gels have either managed to replicate high stiffness or natural skin's self-healing properties, but not both. Now, a team of researchers has developed a hydrogel with a unique structure that overcomes earlier limitations, opening the door to applications such as drug delivery, wound healing, soft robotics sensors and artificial skin.
Categories: Science

An aerosol test for airborne bird flu

Fri, 03/07/2025 - 9:57am
Recent outbreaks of highly pathogenic avian influenza (also known as bird flu) have created a need for rapid and sensitive detection methods to mitigate its spread. Now, researchers have developed a prototype sensor that detects a type of influenza virus that causes bird flu (H5N1) in air samples. The low-cost handheld sensor detects the virus at levels below an infectious dose and could lead to rapid aerosol testing for airborne avian influenza.
Categories: Science

AI reveals new way to strengthen titanium alloys and speed up manufacturing

Fri, 03/07/2025 - 9:57am
Producing high-performance titanium alloy parts -- whether for spacecraft, submarines or medical devices -- has long been a slow, resource-intensive process. Even with advanced metal 3D-printing techniques, finding the right manufacturing conditions has required extensive testing and fine-tuning. What if these parts could be built more quickly, stronger and with near-perfect precision? A team is leveraging artificial intelligence to make that a reality. They've identified processing techniques that improve both the speed of production and the strength of these advanced materials -- an advance with implications from the deep sea to outer space.
Categories: Science

Super sapphire resists scratches, glare, fog and dust

Thu, 03/06/2025 - 12:45pm
Researchers have discovered techniques to bestow superpowers upon sapphire, a material that most of us think of as just a pretty jewel.
Categories: Science

Paralyzed man moves robotic arm with his thoughts

Thu, 03/06/2025 - 12:31pm
Researchers have enabled a man who is paralyzed to control a robotic arm through a device that relays signals from his brain to a computer. He was able to grasp, move and drop objects just by imagining himself performing the actions.
Categories: Science

New 'one-pot' technique a breakthrough for material synthesis

Thu, 03/06/2025 - 12:29pm
A new technique builds inorganic and polymer battery electrolytes at the same time, in the same vessel. This 'one-pot' in-situ method creates a controlled, homogeneous blend, pairing the conductivity of the inorganic solids with the flexibility of the polymers.
Categories: Science

Pages