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Physics and Chemistry

  • Does Dark Matter Encircle Earth? Tue, Jan 27 6:18 PM (Scientific American)
    Dark matter is five times as abundant as normal matter in the universe. But it continues to be an enigma because it is invisible and nearly always passes right through normal matter. Astronomers only found out about dark matter by inferring ...
  • Mystery Cosmic Static May Cast Light on Formation of First Stars Tue, Jan 27 6:18 PM (Scientific American)
    The impending digital-TV transition has a forgotten victim: the big bang. You can tune an analog set between broadcast channels and see static, part of which is energy left over from the hot primordial universe. This static is known as the ...
  • Breaking Down Nanostructures by the Atom Tue, Jan 27 6:18 PM (Scientific American)
    In nanotechnology, the position of a single atom can make all the difference--whether a material functions as a semiconductor or an insulator, whether it triggers a vital chemical process or stops it cold. The ability to define every atom i ...
  • Nanomedicine--Revolutionizing the Fight against Cancer Tue, Jan 27 6:18 PM (Scientific American)
    Before going to the gym for a workout or after indulging in cake at the office party, people with diabetes can use a portable monitor to take a quick blood glucose measurement and adjust their food or insulin intake to prevent extreme dips ...
  • Do Naked Singularities Break the Rules of Physics? Tue, Jan 27 6:18 PM (Scientific American)
    Modern science has introduced the world to plenty of strange ideas, but surely one of the strangest is the fate of a massive star that has reached the end of its life. Having exhausted the fuel that sustained it for millions of years, the s ...
  • The Curious Case of J. Robert Oppenheimer Tue, Jan 27 6:18 PM (Scientific American)
    During the run-up to the 2004 presidential election between John Kerry and George W. Bush, I appeared as a guest on comedian and social commentator Dennis Miller's television talk show on CNBC, during which he made the following comparison: ...
  • Comic Books from the Atomic Age Tue, Jan 27 6:18 PM (Scientific American)
    The Atomic Age kicked off with a bang on July 16, 1945, with the detonation of a test uranium fission bomb at the Alamogordo Test Range in the New Mexico desert, during what's known as the "Golden Age" of comic books and strips. S ...
  • Crickets Con Connubial Conquests with Chemistry Tue, Jan 27 6:18 PM (Scientific American)
    [The following is an exact transcript of this podcast.]As Valentine’s day approaches, remember, it’s the thought that counts. Just ask a decorated cricket. Because according to a study published in the January 21 issue of the jo ...
  • Comic Books from the Atomic Age Tue, Jan 27 6:18 PM (Scientific American)
    The Atomic Age kicked off with a bang on July 16, 1945, with the detonation of a test uranium fission bomb at the Alamogordo Test Range in the New Mexico desert, during what's known as the "Golden Age" of comic books and strips. S ...

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