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Latest physics News | Page 4

Wonder material graphene claims yet another superlative
Timely Pandemic Countermeasures Reduce both Health Damage and Economic Loss
Seeing is more than believing
Famous double-slit experiment recreated in fourth dimension by physicists
Cooking up plasmas with microwaves
Designing better buildings to stop water damage
2022 Yoshinori Ohsumi Fund for Fundamental Research Awarded to Two Researchers
How can you test if gold is pure? Some methods are more destructive than others
Honeycombs in desert
Physicists create new model of ringing black holes
Record low sea ice levels mixed bag for Antarctic voyage
Study Offers Details on Using Electric Fields to Tune Thermal Properties of Ferroelectric Materials
Switch made from single molecule
Charting course in brainy frontier
When light is neither “on” nor “off” in nanoworld
Chiral Phonons Create Spin Current Without Needing Magnetic Materials
Morley student to fly high with aviation award win
Penguin Physics: Understanding the Mechanisms of Underwater Turning Maneuvers in Penguins
Swinburne Alum designs playgrounds for living
Approaching terahertz regime
PolyU research discovers nanoscale ferroelectric new materials exhibiting potential for making computer memory with low cost and low energy consumption
Launching our future, in Adelaide
CRISPR insight: How to fine-tune Cas protein’s grip on DNA
Why does lightning zigzag? At last, we have an answer to mystery
Predicting New Quantum Echoes: Ultrafast Lightwave Control of Electrons in Crystals
Kibble-Zurek Mechanism for Nonequilibrium Phase Transitions
Physicist identifies how electron crystals melt
Astronomers observe intra-group light – elusive glow between distant galaxies
Future is what we make it, says winner of Prime Minister’s Prize for Science
Fruit flies use corrective movements to maintain stability after injury
High-Power Electrostatic Actuators to Realize Artificial Muscles
Truly Chiral Phonons Observed in Three-Dimensional Materials for First Time
Swinburne researchers recognised as national leaders
$1.25M grant to advance control of 2D materials
Calcium may have been heaviest element in stars, study finds
Two A&S postdocs receive Blavatnik awards in physics, chemistry
Giometto to study evolution of microbial populations with $1.9M grant
Scientists discover they can pull water molecules apart using graphene electrodes
Opening eye of storm
South Korea world of potential for physics student Thomas Venville
When art inspires engineering
For longest time: quantum computing engineers set new standard in silicon chip performance
Focusing on complex waves
Middle and high school students solve puzzles with quantum computing at 2022 science class
UW-developed wave sensors deployed to improve hurricane forecasts
Modified microwave oven cooks up next-gen semiconductors
Engineers put flight principles to test
Investigating Magnetic Excitation-induced Spin Current in Chromium Trihalides