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Mechanical Engineering
Results 201 - 220 of 365.
Physics - Mechanical Engineering - 05.02.2015
Oxygen is like kryptonite to titanium
UC Berkeley scientists have found the mechanism by which titanium, prized for its high strength-to-weight ratio and natural resistance to corrosion, becomes brittle with just a few extra atoms of oxygen. Shown is a cross section of grade 3 titanium (containing 0.3 percent oxygen) that has been put under stress and deformed.
Mechanical Engineering - Life Sciences - 08.01.2015
Practice really does make perfect
New research into the way in which we learn new skills finds that a single skill can be learned faster if its follow-through motion is consistent, but multiple skills can be learned simultaneously if the follow-through motion is varied.
Health - Mechanical Engineering - 02.01.2015
Québec Science’s top 10 discoveries of 2014
The Québec Science jury has spoken: three of the 10 Discoveries of the Year selected by the magazine were led by McGill-affiliated researchers. The prestigious annual list honours projects by: Gustavo Turecki, The Douglas/McGill Faculty of Medicine, Psychiatry; McGill's Department of Mechanical Engineering professor François Barthelat; and leading Alzheimer's researcher Judes Poirier of McGill and The Douglas.
Mechanical Engineering - 02.12.2014
Shark-shaped sampler to hunt down ‘fugitive’ air pollution
Industrial sites and highways could become cleaner in the future thanks to shark-shaped samplers that hunt 'fugitive' air pollutants. Scientists at Lancaster University and the Environment Agency are working together to develop a new sampler to measure levels of so-called fugitive pollutants - such as particulates, and gases such as ammonia and nitrogen dioxide.
Electroengineering - Mechanical Engineering - 01.12.2014
New research could transform high speed optical networks
Press release issued: 1 December 2014 There is an ever growing demand for high speed internet communication systems. New research has shown optical switching technology built on nanoantenna reflectarrays and tunable materials could transform high speed optical networks. The study by Dr Maciej Klemm and Professor Martin Cryan from the University of Bristol's Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering is published in the journal, Optics Express .
Chemistry - Mechanical Engineering - 14.11.2014

Researchers at the UCLA Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science have developed a more efficient way to turn methanol into useful chemicals, such as liquid fuels, and that would also reduce carbon dioxide emissions. Methanol, which is a product of natural gas, is well-known as a common "feedstock" chemical — one that is processed into gasoline and other chemicals such as solvents, adhesives, paints and plastics.
Mechanical Engineering - 14.11.2014
Three touchdowns for Rosetta’s lander
14 November 2014 After achieving touchdown on a comet for the first time in history, scientists and engineers are busy analysing this new world and the nature of the landing. Touchdown was confirmed at ESA's Space Operations Centre in Darmstadt, Germany at 16:03 GMT/17:03 CET on 12 November. Since then, scientists, flight dynamics specialists and engineers from ESA, the Lander Control Centre in Cologne, Germany, and the Philae Science, Operations and Navigation Centre in Toulouse, France have been studying the first data returned from the lander.
Mechanical Engineering - 06.11.2014
Penn State plans second patent auction
Over the last 10 years an average of 40 U.S. patents per year have been issued to the Penn State Research Foundation, Penn State's technology transfer agent. UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa, - Next month, for the second time this year, Penn State plans to auction some of its U. S. patents online.
Physics - Mechanical Engineering - 03.11.2014

Yale engineer Jan Schroers will lead a three-year, $1.2 million project intended to dramatically accelerate the pace of discovering and characterizing bulk metallic glasses (BMGs), a versatile type of pliable glass that's stronger than steel. The grant, awarded as part of the National Science Foundation's program for Designing Materials to Revolutionize and Engineer our Future, will enable Schroers' team to screen more than 3,000 potential BMG alloys in a week, a vast improvement over traditional methods that take as much as a full day to identify a single alloy.
Mechanical Engineering - Electroengineering - 27.10.2014

Joint BioEnergy Institute Researchers Combine Systems Biology with Genetic Engineering to Improve Production of Isopentenol in E.Coli In the on-going effort to develop advanced biofuels as a clean, green and sustainable source of liquid transportation fuels, researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)'s Joint BioEnergy Institute (JBEI) have identified microbial genes that can improve both the tolerance and the production of biogasoline in engineered strains of Escherichia coli.
Physics - Mechanical Engineering - 20.10.2014
1980s aircraft helps quantum technology take flight
1980s aircraft helps quantum technology take flight 20 October 2014 What does a 1980s experimental aircraft have to do with state-of-the art quantum technology? Lots, as shown by new research from the Quantum Control Laboratory at the University of Sydney, and published in Nature Physics today. Over several years a team of scientists has taken inspiration from aerospace research and development programs to make unusually shaped experimental aircraft fly.
Mechanical Engineering - Architecture & Buildings - 07.10.2014
Architectural engineering's Houser leads study on perceptions of LED lighting
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. A research team led by Kevin Houser, professor of architectural engineering, has determined that color and whiteness rendition has a profound effect on LED light source preference. The team's findings were published in Lighting Research & Technology in an article titled "Perceptual responses to LED illumination with colour rendering indices of 85 and 97" at: http://lrt.sagepub.com/content/early/2014/08/22/1477153514548089 .
Mechanical Engineering - Physics - 06.10.2014
New imaging technique could detect acoustically “invisible” cracks
Press release issued: 6 October 2014 The next generation of aircraft could be thinner and lighter thanks to the development of a new imaging technique that could detect damage previously invisible to acoustic imaging systems. The nonlinear acoustic technique developed by researchers from the University of Bristol's Ultrasonics and Non-destructive Testing (NDT) research group is published in the current issue of Physical Review Letters together with an accompanying article in Physics .
Physics - Mechanical Engineering - 08.09.2014

Hydrodynamic experiments such as Leda involve non-nuclear surrogate materials that mimic many of the properties of nuclear materials. "This experiment ultimately enhances confidence in our ability to predictively model and assess weapon performance in the absence of full-scale underground nuclear testing," said Webster.
Physics - Mechanical Engineering - 19.08.2014

Bubbling down: Discovery suggests surprising uses for common bubbles Posted August 19, 2014; 09:30 a.m. by John Sullivan, Office of Engineering Anyone who has ever had a glass of fizzy soda knows that bubbles can throw tiny particles into the air. But in a finding with wide industrial applications, Princeton researchers have demonstrated that the bursting bubbles push some particles down into the liquid as well.
Mechanical Engineering - Economics - 01.08.2014
3D printing finds its ’sweet spot’ through ’nifty shades of grey’
Engineers discover new technique to make 3D printing faster and more economical Aerospace and automotive industries will benefit New method could also provide boost to the sports footwear industry A 'less is more' approach has enabled UK engineers to make 3D printed parts lighter and stronger, using methods that will also make 3D printing faster and more economical.
Physics - Mechanical Engineering - 31.07.2014
For stable flight, fruit flies sense every wing beat
Simulated flight without control. The model insect hovers for a brief period before succumbing to pitch instability, which leads to its tumble and fall. In order to stabilize their flight, fruit flies sense the orientation of their bodies every time they beat their wings - one beat about every 4 milliseconds.
Physics - Mechanical Engineering - 30.07.2014
Verifying the future of quantum computing
Press release issued: 30 July 2014 Physicists are one step closer to proving the reliability of a quantum computer - a machine which promises to revolutionise the way we trade over the internet and provide new tools to perform powerful simulations. By harnessing the strange laws of quantum mechanics, future quantum computers offer the hope of quickly solving problems that would take even the best supercomputers the lifetime of the universe to solve.
Environment - Mechanical Engineering - 29.07.2014

Two Cornell hydrologists have completed a thorough groundwater examination of drinking water in a potential hydraulic fracturing area in New York's Southern Tier. They determined that drinking water in potable wells near conventional natural gas wells in Chenango County is safe to drink and within federal guidelines.
Physics - Mechanical Engineering - 22.07.2014

Bamboo construction has traditionally been rather straightforward: Entire stalks are used to create latticed edifices, or woven in strips to form wall-sized screens. The effect can be stunning, and also practical in parts of the world where bamboo thrives. But there are limitations to building with bamboo.
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









