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Researchers have used zinc oxide microwires to significantly improve the efficiency at which gallium nitride light-emitting diodes (LED) convert electricity to ultraviolet light. The devices are believed to be the first LEDs whose performance has been enhanced by the creation of an electrical charge in a piezoelectric material using the piezo-phototronic effect.

UCLA mathematicians working with the Los Angeles Police Department to analyze crime patterns have designed a mathematical algorithm to identify street gangs involved in unsolved violent crimes. Their research is based on patterns of known criminal activity between gangs, and represents the first scholarly study of gang violence of its kind.

The human genome has been mapped. Now, it's on to proteins, a much more daunting task. There are 20,300 genes, but there are millions of distinct protein molecules in our bodies. Many of these hold keys to understanding disease and targeting treatment.

The merging of two technologies under development - plasmonics and nanophotonics - is promising the emergence of new "quantum information systems" far more powerful than today's computers.

Nothingness – this is the research subject-matter of a team of theoretical physicists. "The ground state of our world can't be described by the absence of all matter," Professor Dr. Holger Gies, "This so-called quantum vacuum rather turns out to be a complex state of constantly fluctuating quantum fields with physical properties."

Using highly potent antibodies isolated from HIV-positive people, researchers have recently begun to identify ways to broadly neutralize the many possible subtypes of HIV. Now, a team led by biologists at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) has built upon one of these naturally occurring antibodies to create a stronger version they believe is a better candidate for cl

Physicists at the Technische Universitaet Muenchen (TUM) are opening a new window into the life of biological cells, using a technique that lets them grab the ends of a single protein molecule and pull, making continuous, direct measurements as it unfolds and refolds.

Stir this clear liquid in a glass vial and nothing happens. Shake this liquid, and free-floating sheets of protein-like structures emerge, ready to detect molecules or catalyze a reaction. This isn't the latest gadget from James Bond's arsenal -- rather, the latest research from the U. S. Department of Energy (DOE)'s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) scientists unveiling how sl

If quantum computers are ever to be realized, they likely will be made of different types of parts that will need to share information with one another, just like the memory and logic circuits in today's computers do. However, prospects for achieving this kind of communication seemed distant—until now. A team of physicists working at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has sh

Laser frequency combs—extraordinarily precise tools for measuring frequencies (or colors) of light—have helped propel advances in timekeeping, trace gas detection and related physics research to new heights in the past decade. While typical lasers operate at only a single or handful of frequencies, laser frequency combs operate simultaneously at many frequencies, approaching a million for some

The human eye is as comfortable with white light generated by diode lasers as with that produced by increasingly popular light-emitting diodes (LEDs), according to tests conceived at Sandia National Laboratories.
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An analysis of fine sediments at the bottom of an African lake has challenged the idea that the once-tropical-savanna-covered Sahara rapidly dried into what is now the largest desert on Earth. A report in tomorrow's issue of Science argues that the shift was gradual, taking place over 3000 years.
Melting remains with lye may one day rival burial and cremation.
Even "micro" quakes around U.S. set nerves on edge.
Chemspider website provides free information on millions of molecules.
Worries about an apocalypse unleashed by particle accelerators are not new, says Philip Ball. They have their source in old myths, which are hard to dispel.
Biotech pioneer Leroy Hood explains how systems biology will impact medicine.
Researchers say they can photograph an object using light that didn't touch it by exploiting a quantum effect but other experts remain cautious
Scientists build a device that mimics the process by which spiders produce fine, yet super-strong.
Behind the natural beauty of a rosebud covered in dew drops lies a decades-old mystery: why don't the tiny droplets fall off, even when the flower is turned upside down? Now researchers have unpicked the secrets of the rose's trick, and replicate it in a man-made material.
The standard model still doesn't describe magnets' spooky action at a distance.
Fullerenes could be used to reduce amount of power needed in memory devices.
The Illinois earthquake surprised residents, but not scientists.
A new class of high-temperature superconductors has been discovered in a breakthrough that once again has the scientific community whispering that economically feasible magnetic levitation and lossless energy transmission may be possible.
Scientists forecast a major West Coast temblor in the next three decades.
The fielders' nightmare a simple-looking vertical ball that somehow eludes capture has been found to be more complex than it looks
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