A nickel-titanium alloy recently developed and currently being tested by the University of Nevada, could make bridges elastic—allowing them to move slightly with vibrations and then revert back to their original shape.
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Nine countries are pouring research dollars into the charcoal-like substance to see if biochar can sequester carbon, improve the soil and produce biofuels all at once—on an economically competitive scale.
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The coal sludge spill near Knoxville, Tenn., last week sent more than a billion gallons of coal ash (mixed with water, making coal sludge) spilling across more than 300 acres, at some points covering the land 6 ft deep.
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While generating nuclear collisions is one sexy science project, it can be practical too, giving a boost to national security, cancer research and our understanding of how the universe came to be.
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NASA announced that the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO), the object of the next moon mission, had passed a battery of punishing tests that simulate the hazards of a space voyage, and now the craft is ready for an April launch.
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Disaster struck at British Columbia's Whistler Blackcomb ski resort when ice buildup snapped one of the supporting towers for one of the resort's gondolas, slamming several of the cars to the ground.
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Need that perfect gift for the space buff in your life? Then has NASA got a deal for you: Once the space shuttle fleet retires, probably by 2010, the shuttles will be ready for purchase at a hefty price—about $42 million each.
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Titan is one of the few rocky worlds in the solar system with a thick atmosphere, and it could be home to volcanoes that spew subzero mixtures of water and ammonia or methane, according to scientists at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
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MIT researchers have discovered that trees carry a (small) charge. Now, green energy takes on new meaning with wildfire sensors powered by the woody plants themselves. Here's how it works.
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Researchers are launching rovers to Mars, sending life on long journeys through space, attaching rocks to heat shields and shooting pellets at 4 miles per second—all to find out if life on Earth could have begun in outer space.
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New research from DARPA could open the door to on-demand blood-cell manufacturing on battlefields and in hospitals. Who needs blood donations when you have blood pharming?
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This year a Russian spaceship will send more than 10 of earth’s toughest life forms on an interplanetary Iditarod of sorts. But these animals, plants and bacteria are tough creatures, and scientists think they may survive against all odds.
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When the manager of NASA’s Ballistic Range Complex gets ready for target practice, he’s not firing ordinary shells. Rather, he's shooting tiny replicas of meteors and spacecraft to mimic how craters form and how vehicles may fare in space.
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Negotiators met this week for the United Nations Climate Change Conference to discuss what to do to reduce climate change after the Kyoto Protocol expires.
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The race is on for offshore wind power. The U.S. Department of Energy says that wind power, including offshore wind farms, could account for up to 20 percent of America's electricity generation by 2030.
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An F-18 fighter jet crashed in a residential neighborhood in San Diego, leaving a fiery trail of wreckage and at least four dead. While investigators have given no word of possible causes, they are investigating error in the plane's fly-by-wire system.
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Fringe's tenth episode, "Safe," opens with a team of burglars who rob banks by walking through walls. We talked to experts about the real quantum mechanical phenomenon of tunneling to find out just how unlikely the scenario is.
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We've already found water on mars, but finding organic inhabitants on our red neighbor would be the discovery of the ages. Columnist Glenn Harlan Reynolds worries that it would only make life on Earth more complicated.
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In the latest episode of
Fringe, "The Dreamscape," the Pattern-seeking team turns to its old tricks. The memory-erasing experiment and a fatal hallucination are this week's topics for our resident brain expert.
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Happy Birthday, International Space Station. On Nov. 20, 1998, a Russian rocket launched the first piece of the station into space. Here are some of the headaches, mishaps and near-misses the ISS has had to confront in its 10 years of existence.
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Four water experts came to the Hearst Tower in New York City to discuss how the country can deal with the water crisis, why global warming will exacerbate the problem and what will happen if we do nothing.
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