news
Mechanical Engineering
Results 1 - 20 of 365.
Mechanical Engineering - Transport - 28.11.2025
New algorithms for the efficient design of motorcycles in the digital environment
Researchers at Universidad Carlos III de Madrid (UC3M) have developed a set of innovative methods and algorithms that improve the performance and precision of vehicle design through topological optimization, a mathematical technique that allows designs to be optimized by distributing materials efficiently.
Innovation - Mechanical Engineering - 29.09.2025

Researchers at ETH Zurich have developed an innovative hand exoskeleton that helps persons after stroke re-learn how to grasp.
Chemistry - Mechanical Engineering - 31.07.2025
Chemical synthesis: New, generalisable method for the mechanical formation of three-dimensional molecular structures
Researchers from Humboldt-Universität develop light-powered nano-motor and use it to create ring-shaped molecules that are intertwined like links in a chain. Berlin 31 July, 2025. Threads or ropes can easily be used for braiding, knotting, and weaving. In chemistry, however, processing molecular strands in this way is an almost impossible task.
Mechanical Engineering - 18.07.2025
A shared growth dynamic across the living world
CNRS Communication - July 17, 2025. Based on a scientific publication co-authored by Régis Chirat, researcher at the Laboratoire de Géologie de Lyon , together with Derek E. Moulton and Alain Goriely, professors at Oxford University: "Hierarchical mechanical patterns in morphogenesis: from mollusc shells to plants, fungi and animals" , published in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface on June 25, 2025.
Mechanical Engineering - 14.03.2025
Early prediction of wind turbine failures
A researcher from VUB has developed a system that can predict wind turbine failures caused by early component malfunctions. He specializes in condition monitoring, a technique that uses data from turbine sensors and artificial intelligence to track the machine's condition. "If operators can anticipate that a specific component is about to fail, they can replace it during regular maintenance, preventing turbine downtime," says Dr. Xavier Chesterman, who completed his PhD on this complex issue.
Innovation - Mechanical Engineering - 25.02.2025

Labor market policies shape firms' innovation dynamics. A new UZH study shows for the first time that higher minimum wages for low-skill jobs drive firms to develop automation technologies. Rising wages for high-skill labor, in contrast, can hamper this effect. Does increasing wage pressure encourage automation? Economic theory suggests that it does.
Innovation - Mechanical Engineering - 05.11.2024

As part of the LIMITLESS project, scientists from EPFL, HEIG-VD and Swisspod have completed the longest-ever vacuum capsule journey in Europe's first operational Hyperloop test facility.
Pharmacology - Mechanical Engineering - 03.10.2024

Water pipeline leaks were a big issue in Calgary this past summer , plunging the entire city into two extended periods of water-use restrictions after a mainline suffered a major break in June.
Mechanical Engineering - Electroengineering - 19.09.2024

Thanks to innovations in design, control and production technology, brushless drives for pumps and ventilation systems work more efficiently and quietly.
Mechanical Engineering - Innovation - 19.09.2024

Thanks to innovations in design, control and production technology, brushless drives for pumps and fan systems work more efficiently and quietly. Users of electrical appliances and the automotive industry do benefit. Small electric motors can be found in many household appliances, tools and computers as well as in modern cars, where they drive auxiliary units such as pumps and fans.
Mechanical Engineering - Mathematics - 21.08.2024

The first comprehensive model of rotor aerodynamics could improve the way turbine blades and wind farms are designed and how wind turbines are controlled. The blades of propellers and wind turbines are designed based on aerodynamics principles that were first described mathematically more than a century ago.
Mechanical Engineering - 14.08.2024
Large language models to flag problems in complex systems
The approach can detect anomalies in data recorded over time, without the need for any training. Identifying one faulty turbine in a wind farm, which can involve looking at hundreds of signals and millions of data points, is akin to finding a needle in a haystack. Engineers often streamline this complex problem using deep-learning models that can detect anomalies in measurements taken repeatedly over time by each turbine, known as time-series data.
Mechanical Engineering - 06.05.2024
A better way to ride a motorcycle
Motorcycles are designed to accommodate the average-sized rider, leaving taller and shorter riders vulnerable to discomfort. A new study from the University of Waterloo used software that predicted realistic motorcycle riding behaviours, considering human factors and ergonomic trade-offs. It found that shorter and taller statures require joint adjustments to achieve their preferred riding posture.
Mechanical Engineering - 03.04.2024

Researchers have discovered how sloshing movements can be actively suppressed during the highly dynamic transportation of liquids . In highly automated industrial processes, machines, materials and goods are often moved very quickly. It is important that these movements are carried out precisely and safely.
Physics - Mechanical Engineering - 15.02.2024

Scientists have achieved a milestone by controlling quantum phenomena at room temperature. Image: Conceptual art of the operating device, consisting of a nanopillar-loaded drum sandwiched by two periodically segmented mirrors, allowing the laser light to strongly interact with the drum quantum mechanically at room temperature.
Mechanical Engineering - 12.11.2023
How rock erosion by dissolution creates sharp shapes
Publication of the RDP in the journal PNAS on November 21, 2023. News by CNRS Engineering on December 7, 2023. Water flowing over soluble rocks can create patterns of multiple troughs bordered by sharp ridges. By combining field measurements, a numerical model and laboratory experiments, a team led by the MSC laboratory (CNRS/Université Paris Cité), in collaboration with the LPG (CNRS/Nantes Université/Université d'Angers) and the RDP (CNRS/ENS de Lyon/Inrae) has shown that the appearance of these shapes results from a geometric mechanism.
Microtechnics - Mechanical Engineering - 07.11.2023

A new ETH study compares 27 humanoid robots with humans and comes to the conclusion that while robots have better components, they are still not capable of achieving as much.
Mechanical Engineering - Health - 16.06.2023
Mechanics of the ideal surgical knot
Researchers have published a first study on the mechanics of surgical knots, with results that could be used to train surgeons to tie stronger, safer sutures - a skill that usually requires years of practice to master. Think about the last time you tied your shoe: maybe you tied it tightly, or tied multiple knots to ensure the laces wouldn't come undone.
Mechanical Engineering - 21.04.2023
Gels’ ’memory’ guides their mechanical properties
Publication of the Physics Laboratory in the journal Nature Physics on May 4, 2023. Communication of the CNRS-INSIS on May 9, 2023. The more solids a gel contains, the more solid it is. However, this principle is not sufficient to explain all the mechanical behaviors observed in reality. An international team has discovered that the macroscopic mechanical properties of gels are due to heterogeneities in their structure, inherited from the singular microstructure that the material adopts at the very moment of its gelation.
Mechanical Engineering - 10.03.2023

Solar Team Twente presented its new solar car, with which they will participate in the Bridgestone World Solar Challenge in October this year.
Computer Science - Mar 20
New computer chip material inspired by the human brain could slash AI energy use
New computer chip material inspired by the human brain could slash AI energy use

Politics - Mar 20
Argentina 50 years on from start of dictatorship - is it forgetting the disappeared?
Argentina 50 years on from start of dictatorship - is it forgetting the disappeared?
Life Sciences - Mar 20
Courting the Competition: Some Male Fruit Flies Serenade Each Other Rather Than Fight
Courting the Competition: Some Male Fruit Flies Serenade Each Other Rather Than Fight

Social Sciences - Mar 20
Louis Theroux's manosphere documentary shows some of the subtle ways we can undermine online misogyny
Louis Theroux's manosphere documentary shows some of the subtle ways we can undermine online misogyny

Life Sciences - Mar 20
Hidden Helpers: Pittsburgh's Industrial Past Might Hold the Key to a Cleaner Future
Hidden Helpers: Pittsburgh's Industrial Past Might Hold the Key to a Cleaner Future
Pharmacology - Mar 19
GSK, University of Oxford and Imperial College London launch centre to create computer models of lungs, liver, kidneys and cartilage
GSK, University of Oxford and Imperial College London launch centre to create computer models of lungs, liver, kidneys and cartilage

Innovation - Mar 19
India's new wave of Hindu Religious Entrepreneurship is reshaping our interpretation of success
India's new wave of Hindu Religious Entrepreneurship is reshaping our interpretation of success
Pharmacology - Mar 19
Oxford University spinout Dark Blue Therapeutics acquired to advance leukaemia treatment
Oxford University spinout Dark Blue Therapeutics acquired to advance leukaemia treatment
Veterinary - Mar 19
New RVC study challenges common beliefs on desirable behaviours in designer 'Doodle' crossbreeds
New RVC study challenges common beliefs on desirable behaviours in designer 'Doodle' crossbreeds

Agronomy & Food Science - Mar 19
Bird Flu Risk to Danish Cattle - New Tool Can Warn Farmers Before Infection Spreads
Bird Flu Risk to Danish Cattle - New Tool Can Warn Farmers Before Infection Spreads









