RAILWAY AGE, OCTOBER 2023 ISSUE: What exactly is stress? It’s a tough—and often-asked—question. Welcome to “Timeout for Tech with Gary T. Fry, Ph.D., P.E.” Each month, we examine a technology topic ...
A face-serum staple just helped a research team build an invisible film that conducts electricity like a metal. At La Trobe University in Melbourne, the group used hyaluronic acid to guide the growth ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
1,800°F coating could turn China’s fighter jets into ghosts invisible to radar
The coating, only 0.1 millimeter thick, can reportedly endure temperatures as high as 1,000 degrees Celsius (1,832 degrees ...
In brief: Researchers in China may be on the verge of bringing invisibility cloaks from the Harry Potter movies to life. A team from the University of Electronic Science and Technology claims to have ...
Scientists at La Trobe University have produced a new, powerful electricity-conducting material, in research which could revolutionise smartphones and wearable technologies like medical devices. The ...
Waterjet Channel on MSN
Can plastic really cut wood?
In this video, we test an invisible saw blade to determine its cutting effectiveness on various materials. The blade is ...
7.3 billion e-toys – car sets, electric trains, music toys, talking dolls, drones, etc. – discarded annually, an average of ~1 per person on Earth; Discarded vapes alone annually weigh as much as 3 ...
9don MSN
Nonlocality-enabled photonic analogies unlock wormholes and multiple realities in optical systems
Researchers have harnessed nonlocal artificial materials to create optical systems that emulate parallel spaces, wormholes, ...
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