ScienceDaily: Strange Science News |
- A hint of new physics in polarized radiation from the early universe
- Oddly satisfying metamaterials store energy in their skin
- New glue sticks easily, holds strongly, and is a gas to pull apart
- A shapeshifting material based on inorganic matter
- How does the spider spin its self-assembled silk?
A hint of new physics in polarized radiation from the early universe Posted: 02 Dec 2020 08:45 AM PST Astronomers developed a new method to calibrate detectors to the light from dust in our Galaxy, thereby describing a new physics, with 99.2 percent accuracy, that may show parity symmetry breaking. |
Oddly satisfying metamaterials store energy in their skin Posted: 02 Dec 2020 08:45 AM PST Researchers have developed a way for a material to store energy in its skin through invertible domes. |
New glue sticks easily, holds strongly, and is a gas to pull apart Posted: 02 Dec 2020 05:52 AM PST Research introduces temporary adhesives that don't require tearing or ripping to pull apart. |
A shapeshifting material based on inorganic matter Posted: 30 Nov 2020 10:15 AM PST By embedding titanium-based sheets in water, a group led by scientists has created a material using inorganic materials that can be converted from a hard gel to soft matter using temperature changes, recreating the strange behavior of sea cucumbers. |
How does the spider spin its self-assembled silk? Posted: 30 Nov 2020 07:11 AM PST Researchers report on a new model for spider silk assembly. The key to spider silk 'spinning' is a combination of acidification and a process known as liquid-liquid phase separation, or LLPS. |
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