ScienceDaily: Top Technology News |
- Diamond in the rough: Half-century puzzle solved
- New clues to the early solar system from ancient meteorites
- Behold, the artificial jellyfish: Researchers create moving model, using silicone polymer and heart muscle cells
Diamond in the rough: Half-century puzzle solved Posted: 22 Jul 2012 11:57 AM PDT A team of mineral physicists has for the first time confirmed through high-pressure experiments the structure of cold-compressed graphite, a form of carbon that is comparable in hardness to its cousin, diamond, but only requires pressure to synthesize. The researchers believe their findings could open the way for a super hard material that can withstand great force and can be used -- as diamond-based materials are now -- for many electronic and industrial applications. |
New clues to the early solar system from ancient meteorites Posted: 22 Jul 2012 10:52 AM PDT In order to understand Earth's earliest history -- its formation from solar system material into the present-day layering of metal core and mantle, and crust -- scientists look to meteorites. New research focuses on one particularly old type of meteorite called diogenites. These samples were examined using an array of techniques, including precise analysis of certain elements for important clues to some of the solar system's earliest chemical processing. |
Posted: 22 Jul 2012 10:51 AM PDT Scientists have turned inanimate silicone and living cardiac muscle cells into a freely swimming "jellyfish." The finding serves as a proof of concept for reverse engineering a variety of muscular organs and simple life forms. |
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