Scientists build the world’s smallest engine0
- From Around the Web, Science & Technology
- May 4, 2016
University of Cambridge physicists have created an engine that is one million times smaller than an ant.
University of Cambridge physicists have created an engine that is one million times smaller than an ant.
A study of DNA from ancient human bones has helped unlock the secrets of Europe’s Ice Age inhabitants.
No, this isn’t Frankenstein, scientists are studying on how people who were clinically declared dead back to life.
Using data from the Solar Wind Around Pluto (SWAP) instrument from the New Horizons July 2015 flyby, scientists have for the first time observed the material coming off of Pluto’s atmosphere and studied how it interacts with the solar wind, leading to yet another “Pluto surprise.”
An issue has been an accurate prediction of the size of the “bootstrap current”—a self-generating electric current—and an understanding of what carries the current at the edge of plasmas in doughnut-shaped facilities called tokamaks.
“…you’ll be dealing with little green men”
5000 schools together. 1 million children meditating for world peace at the Phra Shammakaya Temple of Thailand.
IBM believes it can demonstrate an experimental chip that will prove the power of quantum computers in just a few years.
“This discovery represents a new fundamental understanding of the behavior of water and the way water utilizes energy,”
China wants to LISTEN to any advanced civilisations out there in space
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