Patterned diamond films could extend the lifespan of electronic devices by removing unwanted heat
LHCb spots elusive particle in just one year of data
Scientists discuss whether AI could surpass human contributions to physics by 2035
Global conflicts are making renewable energy more attractive, but an all-renewable grid will require solving physics problems as well as political and economic ones
MAVEN probe captures signature of a "whistler"
New work could help optimize quantum memories and information processing
A new bio-inspired material has a record-breaking energy density and outperforms lithium-ion batteries
Twisted nickel nanotubes use shape as the source of asymmetry
New work could help design electronic devices in which heat can be guided in certain directions, minimizing heat loss
Carbon-rich “schmutz” determines how charge moves between objects made from identical insulating oxides
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Robert P Crease wonders what the death of the US penny will do to how we teach and learn science
Anita Chandran reviews The Body Digital: a Brief History of Humans and Machines from Cuckoo Clocks to ChatGPT by Vanessa Chang
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Little evidence of radionuclide accumulation in vessel's surrounding environment
Read article: Sunken nuclear submarine is leaking radioactive material intermittently
New finding could advance our understanding of high-temperature superconductors
Read article: Superfluid plasmon appears in a two-dimensional superconductor
Texas distiller has donated tens of millions of dollars to scientific research
Read article: Love, Tito’s: vodka maker funds physics research
Ambition and international talent converge as Denmark scales up in quantum science
Read article: International scientists head into the fast-lane of Denmark’s burgeoning quantum ecosystem
Physicists say they may have observed a supersolid phase in a superfluid
Read article: At low exciton density, a superfluid suddenly stops flowing
Giannis Zacharakis is a biophotonics and biomedical imaging researcher and CEO of the precision photonics spin-off Kymatonics
Read article: Ask me anything: Giannis Zacharakis – ‘The ability to pursue questions that genuinely interest you is a privilege’
Technique boosts prospects for building quantum computers with more than 100,000 qubits
Read article: Single metasurface could generate record numbers of trapped neutral atoms
Observations of how magnetism behaves in atomically thin materials could pave the way for new generations of ultracompact magnetic technologies
Read article: Physicists demonstrate long-predicted exotic magnetic phases in 2D material
This is the fifth international photowalk following events held in 2010, 2012, 2015 and 2018
Read article: Inside the world’s particle‑physics labs: Global Physics Photowalk 2025 winners revealed
Can you reconstruct the astrophysics image we’ve pulled apart?
Read article: Stripes of Enceladus: a jigsaw puzzle
Scientists have created a material with the ability to repeatedly and autonomously repair cracks
Read article: Self-healing materials could make automobile parts last over 100 years
In a breakthrough in droplet physics, researchers find a way to get centimetre-scale water droplets to jump into the air
Read article: A bursting bubble can make a puddle jump
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For more than 60 years, the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) has applied science and technology to make the world a safer place. Its defining responsibility is ensuring the safety, security and reliability of the nation’s nuclear deterrent
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Innovations in Applied Mechanics brings together two previous, highly successful conferences MPSVA – Modern Practice in Stress and Vibration Analysis and DAMAS – International Conference on Damage Assessment in Structures to present research findings in stress analysis, vibration dynamics and structural damage assessment with the intention of providing directed focus on the state-of-the-art in theoretical and experimental methodology.