Interesting Engineering on MSN
Are quantum particles polygamous? Electron crowding triggers shocking breakups
Are quantum particles polygamous? New experiments suggest some of them abandon long-standing partnerships when ...
A new study published in Physical Review A suggests that, somewhat counterintuitively, quantum particles have a chance of moving backwards, even when pushed forwards. The rest of this article is ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Hidden dimensions could explain mass, upending physics as we know it
Physicists are quietly testing an audacious idea: that the mass of everything around us might not come from an invisible ...
In the new device, an array of 256 speakers, each about 1 centimeter wide, faces another, identical speaker array across a distance of 23 centimeters. The speakers emit sound waves at frequencies too ...
Researchers at the Centre for Nano Science and Engineering (CeNSE), IISc, have developed a technique to trap and move nano-sized particles in a fluidic medium using only light. The nanotweezer ...
WASHINGTON — One of the enduring sci-fi moments of the big screen — R2-D2 beaming a 3-D image of Princess Leia into thin air in “Star Wars” — is closer to reality, thanks to the smallest of screens: ...
There's an ultimate speed limit in the Universe: the speed of light in a vacuum, c. If you don't have any mass — whether you're a light wave (a photon), a gluon, or even a gravitational wave — that's ...
Peer Fischer outlines the prospects for creating “nanoswimmers” that can be steered through the body to deliver drugs directly to their targets Moving right along: Nanopropellers can swim through ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. The Universe is out there, waiting for you to discover it. Deep underground in Europe, the world's most powerful particle ...
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