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Nanoribbons Moved by Light: Could Propel Cell-Sized Submarines, Create...

The ability of matter to move light underpins such common phenomena as transparency, refraction, and reflection. But light moving matter? That’s a bit rarer. So rare, in fact, that University of...

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Nintendo’s 3DS Will Take the DS Experience into Three Dimensions, Somehow

With Avatar, the highest-grossing movie of all time, and the World Cup, the most-watched TV broadcast, both in 3-D, it was only a matter of time until Nintendo, the most popular video game maker in...

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Clever Math Puts a Firm Number on the Amount of Dark Matter in Existence

Dark matter, the material that makes up the majority of the matter in the universe, remains so mysterious that scientists don’t even know how much of it there is, let alone how it behaves. However,...

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Video: Computer-Controlled Bacteria Build a Miniature Pyramid

While so many scientists spend their time trying to create nanobots the size of bacteria, researcher at the NanoRobotics Laboratory of the École Polytechnique de Montréal, Canada, decided to simply...

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Electrical Nerve Hacking Restores Movement To Paralyzed Limbs

When Matthew Schiefer, a neural engineer at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio, first managed to stimulate the leg of an unconscious volunteer by wrapping an electrode around a nerve...

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National Institute of Standards and Technology Tests Spray-On Transistors,...

In a discovery sure to help the development of solar panel and display technology, scientists at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have engineered transistors that they can...

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First Ever Multicellular Animals Found In Oxygen-Free Environment

In the 236 years since oxygen was identified as a life-giving necessity, no scientist anywhere has discovered a multicellular animal capable of living without the stuff. Until now. Researchers from...

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Hewlett-Packard Unveils Real-World Memristor, Chip of the Future

In 1971, electrical engineering professor Leon Chua proposed a theoretical basic electronics component called a memristor. In 2008, Hewlett Packard brought the memristor out of theory and into the...

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NASA Tests Handy-Man Space Robots For Orbital Repairs

With cuts in the manned space program and the impending retirement of the Space Shuttle, NASA will soon face the need to repair satellites without the ability to send any astronauts to do it....

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Lab Rats’ Pampered Lifestyles Found to Skew Research Results

Sure, the maze gets boring every so often. And yeah, there’s not much variety in the food. But compared to the kill or be killed world of the wild, being a lab rat is a pretty good life. So good, in...

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US Troops In Afghanistan to Get Sensors That See Through Walls

As if aerial robots and bionic limbs didn’t make the Army seem futuristic enough, it looks like another hallmark of sci-fi, X-ray vision, will ship off to Afghanistan later this year. The device in...

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Physicists Prove Teleportation of Energy Is Possible

Over five years ago, scientists succeeded in teleporting information. Unfortunately, the advance failed to bring us any closer to the Star Trek future we all dream of. Now, researchers in Japan have...

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Ion Engines Will Make Little CubeSats Steerable

The DIY miniature satellites known as CubeSats have a lot going for them. They’re cheap, they’re easy to program, and they’re small. That last benefit also adds a downside, in that the CubeSats are...

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Marine Corps’ Unmanned Programmable Copter Passes First Major Test

The difficulty of supplying remote outposts across rugged terrain has contributed to many of the deadliest moments in the Afghan War, by preventing the delivery of weapons and ammo to engaged...

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Video: Half-Kilometer-Long Explosive Whip Clears IEDs The Explode-y Way

Clearing battlefield obstacles has pitted trapper against sapper since Roman times. But whereas the minefields and dragon teeth of previous conflicts merely slowed advancing armies, the IEDs favored...

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Antarctic Collision Snaps Rhode-Island-Sized Iceberg Off Glacier

This month, an iceberg roughly the size of Luxembourg slammed into an Antarctic glacier known as the Mertz Ice Tongue. Then, last week, a Rhode Island-sized section of the Mertz Ice Tongue finally...

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Noses Beat Eyes as a Biometric Identification Marker

While retina scans still give a James Bond feel to security, and finger prints have a bit of retro charm, the cutting edge of biometric identification has moved to a new body part: the nose. According...

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Breakthrough Low-Power Desalination and Purification Technology Brings Clean...

High costs, in money and energy, limit the usefulness of desalination as a way to provide drinkable water in disaster areas. However, a new method could lead to portable desalination devices simple...

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US District Court Says No To Patenting Human Genes

In a move that could significantly alter the future of genetic medicine and the industry around it, a US District Court judge invalidated seven patents for human genes linked to breast and ovarian...

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Electrical Nerve Hacking Restores Movement To Paralyzed Limbs

When Matthew Schiefer, a neural engineer at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio, first managed to stimulate the leg of an unconscious volunteer by wrapping an electrode around a nerve...

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