Archive for the ‘materials’ category: Page 64
Jan 15, 2024
Watch: Plant caught on cam ‘talking’ to neighbouring plant in groundbreaking study
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in category: materials
Just like humans, plants also communicate with each other as soon as any danger or attack is detected in their neighbourhood. Scientists know about this phenomenon since the 1980s, having identified at least 80 species who act in their defence in crisis situations. However, it was still shrouded in mystery as to how exactly plants receive such danger signals from their neighbours.
Now, a team of Japanese scientists has not just solved this puzzle but also filmed the communication among plants in an amazing video. In a study published in Nature Communications, molecular biologists at Saitama University in Japan, Yuri Aratani and Takuya Uemura, demonstrated how these plants behave upon detecting danger.
Jan 14, 2024
Back UK creative sector or gamble on AI, Getty Images boss tells Sunak
Posted by Gemechu Taye in categories: materials, robotics/AI
Rishi Sunak needs to decide whether he wants to back the UK’s creative industries or gamble everything on an artificial intelligence boom, the chief executive of Getty Images has said.
Craig Peters, who has led the image library since 2019, spoke out amid growing anger from the creative and media sector at the harvesting of their material for “training data” for AI companies. His company is suing a number of AI image generators in the UK and US for copyright infringement.
Jan 14, 2024
Revolutionary MIT tech traps water micropollutants like magnets
Posted by Gemechu Taye in categories: chemistry, materials
Chemical engineers at MIT have developed a hydrogel system using zwitterionic materials for efficient water treatment in just one step, with minimal impact on the environment.
Jan 14, 2024
No more heat: a new study shows some innovative strategies to beat heat
Posted by Gemechu Taye in categories: innovation, materials
Advanced cooling technologies and reflective materials could slash temperatures in Riyadh by 4.5°C.
Explore the research unlocking ways to cool one of the world’s hottest cities – Riyadh – using ‘super cool’ building materials and irrigated greenery.
Jan 12, 2024
New Neural Implant Unlocks Deep Brain Activity
Posted by Paul Battista in categories: materials, neuroscience
Summary: Researchers create a transparent graphene-based neural implant offering high-resolution brain activity data from the surface. The implant’s dense array of tiny graphene electrodes enables simultaneous recording of electrical and calcium activity in deep brain layers.
This innovation overcomes previous implant limitations and offers insights for neuroscientific studies. The transparent design allows optical imaging alongside electrical recording, revolutionizing neuroscience research.
Jan 11, 2024
AI makes new material that could dramatically change how batteries work
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in categories: materials, robotics/AI
Jan 11, 2024
Unveiling the Dance of Noble Gas Atoms: Imaging Breakthrough at the University of Vienna
Posted by Laurence Tognetti, Labroots Inc. in categories: materials, particle physics
Like several scientific discoveries, the researchers stumbled upon this result accidentally while conducting experiments irradiating graphene when they found that irradiated noble gases became trapped between two sheets of graphene, which results in the graphene forming small pockets where the atoms of the gases coalesce into small groups of atoms.
“We used scanning transmission electron microscopy to observe these clusters, and they are really fascinating and a lot of fun to watch,” said Manuel Längle, who is a PhD student at the University of Vienna and lead author of the study. “They rotate, jump, grow and shrink as we image them. Getting the atoms between the layers was the hardest part of the work. Now that we have achieved this, we have a simple system for studying fundamental processes related to material growth and behavior.”
Jan 10, 2024
Tunable quantum interferometer for correlated moiré electrons
Posted by Dan Breeden in categories: materials, quantum physics
Gate-defined superconducting moiré devices offer high tunability for probing the nature of superconducting and correlated insulating states. Here, the authors report the Little–Parks and Aharonov–Bohm effects in a single gate-defined magic-angle twisted bilayer graphene device.