11/21/2008
Watching the nanoworld in 4-D (ZDNet)
Caltech researchers have developed a new technique named 4-D electron microscopy to capture images of atoms in real time. They claim that their 4-D microscope will revolutionize the way we look at the nanoworld. Caltech adds that Ahmed Zewail, winner of the 1999 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, and his colleagues,...
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11/21/2008
Nobel Prize winner Heeger sheds light on solar technology progress (Daily Northwestern)
The next generation of solar panels promises to be less conspicuous and expensive, but the technology still needs to be made more efficient, said Prof. Alan Heeger, winner of the 2000 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, during a lecture Thursday. Heeger, a professor of physics at the University of California, Santa Barbara, said there is still much work to be done.
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11/23/2008
Revolutionizing The Way We Look At The Nano World Using Caltech's 4-D Microscope (Medical News Today)
More than a century ago, the development of the earliest motion picture technology made what had been previously thought "magical" a reality: capturing and recreating the movement and dynamism of the world around us.
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11/21/2008
Nobel Prize winner visits JSU (The Clarion-Ledger)
Jackson State University is hosting a Nobel Prize winner on campus today as part of the Nobel Laureate Seminar Series.
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11/22/2008
Researchers At Leeds, UK Reshape The Future Of Drug Discovery (Medical News Today)
Scientists in Leeds have devised a new way to create the next generation of man-made molecules in a breakthrough that could revolutionise drug development. Creating new drugs to combat disease and illness requires the completion of a complex 3D jigsaw.
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11/22/2008
New Orleans Area Events: Pick Of The Weekend (Bayou Buzz)
Margarita Darling
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11/21/2008
Electron strobe turns atoms into movie stars (New Scientist)
A microscope equipped with a strobe-like electron source can capture the movement of atoms with unprecedented clarity
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11/21/2008
'4-D' Microscope Revolutionizes The Way We Look At Nano World (Science Daily)
More than a century ago, the development of the earliest motion picture technology made what had been previously thought "magical" a reality: capturing and recreating the movement and dynamism of the world around us. A breakthrough technology based on new concepts has now accomplished a similar feat, but on an atomic scale by allowing, for the first time, the real-time, real-space visualization ...
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11/20/2008
Biomedical Research Profits From The Exploration Of The Deep Sea (Medical News Today)
A study published in the scientific journal PLoS ONE highlights how the exploration of the ocean depths can benefit humankind. This is the story of a voyage of discovery, starting with marine animals that glow, the identification of the molecules responsible and their application as marker in living cells.
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11/20/2008
Exploring the deep sea can benefit biomedical research (New Kerala)
Washington, Nov 20 : A new study has highlighted how the exploration of the ocean depths can benefit humankind in the field of biomedical research.
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