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Physics World February 2015

Physics World February 2015

Mining the Moon: the prospects for lunar commerce

It’s now more than 40 years since the last person set foot on the Moon, but since then we’ve come to realize that the lunar surface is not only home to plenty of rare-earth elements, such as lanthanum and neodynium, but also to more than a billion tonnes of water-ice at the poles. Several US firms in fact have bold plans to mine those resources, as our cover story this month explains. Elsewhere in the issue, we look at the challenges of “open data” – everyone’s up for it in principle, but making it work in practice is another thing altogether. There’s also a great feature on the future of iron-based superconductors by theorist Hideo Aoki and the discoverer of the first iron-based superconductor, Hideo Hosono. Don’t miss either our look at the future of particle colliders.

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Levitating magnet feature

A superconducting surprise comes of age

exhibition curator Lorraine Walsh with scientist and artist Eric Heller opinion

Quantum-inspired art

Painting of a young James Watt dreamily pondering the steam coming out of a tea kettle review

Craft, science, early industry

Futuristic-looking illustration showing pipelines on the Moon surface leading to a group of egg-shaped buildings in the distance that look like a factory. Above the horizon the green and blue Earth is rising feature

One step from Earth

Photo of an old telephone labelled National Telephone Service review

Ringing changes on vital information

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