Month: April 2020

{FEATUREDTYPE}: {FEATUREDCAPTION} view more  Credit: {FEATUREDCREDIT}{FEATUREDCREDITMORE} A discovery that long eluded physicists has been detected in a laboratory at Princeton. A team of physicists detected superconducting currents — the flow of electrons without wasting energy — along the exterior edge of a superconducting material. The finding was published in the May 1 issue of the journal
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I enjoy the relationship between the three young women because they are so different and they balance one another. What happens to one affects them all, but they’re all uniquely affected. The writing gives them space to exist as individuals while still treating them as a unit. My only real—not issue, but note—is that Abigail
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IMAGE: Researchers suggested using machine learning methods to predict the properties of artificial sapphire crystals. It is a unique material widely used in microelectronics, optics and electronics. view more  Credit: Peter the Great St.Petersburg Polytechnic University Researchers from Peter the Great St.Petersburg Polytechnic University (SPbPU) in collaboration with colleagues from Southern Federal University and Indian Institute
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Marianne’s sexual proclivities have a slightly different treatment in the book as well, where word gets out about the images. The issue of consent is far murkier here, since the book doesn’t depict Marianne straightforwardly asking for a dom/sub relationship or a clear violation of those boundaries, but rather an entire relationship built on the
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For the past 20-plus years, ever since Blade and the first X-Men film opened the floodgates for superhero movies, some of Marvel Comics’ most iconic characters have found their way to the big screen. Spider-Man, the X-Men, Captain America, the Fantastic Four, Iron Man, Thor, Captain Marvel…but the very first Marvel superhero has yet to
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IMAGE: This is Dr. Pooria Lesani, University of Sydney. view more  Credit: Dr Pooria Lesani, University of Sydney Chronic iron imbalances – having either too little or too much iron in the blood – can result in medical conditions ranging from anaemia and haemochromatosis through to more severe diseases, such as cancer, Parkinson’s Disease and Alzheimer’s
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IMAGE: Scientists proposed a new approach for efficient nanomaterials’ modeling. view more  Credit: Peter the Great St.Petersburg Polytechnic University Researchers from Higher School of Theoretical Mechanics of Peter the Great St.Petersburg Polytechnic University (SPbPU) and Tel Aviv University proposed a new approach to improve the efficiency of mathematical modeling of the processes in materials at the
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IMAGE: Film deformation and changes in interference color by adsorption of molecule to suspended graphene. view more  Credit: COPYRIGHT (C) TOYOHASHI UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Overview Associate Prof. Kazuhiro Takahashi and Mr. Shin Kidane (Master’s Program) of the Department of Electrical and Electronic Information Engineering at Toyohashi University of Technology and others developed a
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Former WWE champion, and arguably the biggest wrestling superstar of all-time, “Stone Cold” Steve Austin hasn’t done much scripted television since his retirement from pro wrestling in 2002. Austin has done his share of reality television and has also appeared in some movies while hosting his own successful podcast, The Steve Austin Show, on PodcastOne.  But
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Ghost of Tsushima, one of the PlayStation 4’s last major exclusives, will still be released in 2020, but the game’s release date has been pushed back slightly to July 17. According to Sony and the PlayStation team, it seems this delay can be attributed to the spread of the COVID-19 virus. “As our teams at
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IMAGE: A hydrogel lattice without (left) and with (right) coating. view more  Credit: Jonathan P. Singer/Rutgers University-New Brunswick. Rutgers engineers have created a highly effective way to paint complex 3D-printed objects, such as lightweight frames for aircraft and biomedical stents, that could save manufacturers time and money and provide new opportunities to create “smart skins” for
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Personally, I wonder if the series, like Green’s own Halloween reboot, could discreetly ignore the often contradictory direct-to-video sequels and just focus on the main mythology established by author and filmmaker Clive Barker in the original ’87 horror classic and its earliest sequel, Hellbound: Hellraiser II (1988). Despite the hellish titles, those earlier films, the
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Sony confirmed that The Last of Us Part II will be out on June 19. Writing on the PlayStation Blog, head of SIE Worldwide Studios Hermen Hulst also revealed that the release of Ghost of Tsushima has been pushed back by a few weeks to July 17. The announcement comes just hours after The Last
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IMAGE: Using a fluorescence microscope, research scientist Dr. Xiuying Li observes the process of using an ultrashort laser pulse to activate ultra-photosensitive nanovesicles to release molecules. A fluorescence microscope uses fluorescence… view more  Credit: The University of Texas at Dallas University of Texas at Dallas researchers have developed a promising method for remotely stimulating activity in
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IMAGE: After being bombarded with ionizing radiation, this sample with copper-platinum nano-ink on its surface still conducts electricity. view more  Credit: Sandia National Laboratories WASHINGTON, April 27, 2020 — As demand for higher-efficiency and smaller electronics grows, so does demand for a new generation of materials that can be printed at ever smaller dimensions. Such materials
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IMAGE: An artistic impression of the metasurface laser to produce super-chiral twisted light with OAM up to 100. view more  Credit: Wits University Researchers have demonstrated the world’s first metasurface laser that produces “super-chiral light”: light with ultra-high angular momentum. The light from this laser can be used as a type of “optical spanner” to or
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IMAGE: A proof-of-concept Nutromics smart patch. view more  Credit: Nutromics A wearable smart patch will deliver precision data to help people personalise their diets and reduce their risk of developing lifestyle-related chronic diseases like Type 2 diabetes. The world-first personalised nutrition wearable being developed by Australian start-up Nutromics painlessly measures key dietary biomarkers and sends the
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