Science

3D Invisibility Cloak

Posted By Jake Easton on March 19, 2010

Researchers create 3D invisibility cloak
3D Invisibility Cloak

European researchers have taken the world a step closer to fictional wizard Harry Potter's invisibility cloak after they made an object disappear, a study published Thursday in the journal Science showed.Read More

Spray-On Liquid Glass Coating

Posted By Jake Easton on February 11, 2010

Nanopool's non-toxic Liquid Glass protects against everything from bacteria to UV radiation
Liquid Glass Coating

The liquid coating spray, which is harmless to the environment, can be applied to virtually any surface, and has been used to guard against plant disease, protect outdoor structures, and the nose cones of planes and high-speed trains. Liquid glass could soon replace a variety of cleaning products which are harmful to the environment, leaving the world coated in an invisible, wipe-clean sheen.Read More

Intel's 48-Core Processor

Posted By Jake Easton on February 09, 2010

A 48-core prototype processor is part of Intel's move from supercomputer-on-a-chip to data-center-on-a-chip
Intel's 48-Core Processor

Chips that can simulate a supernova or predict a hurricane are yesterday’s goal if Intel’s recently unveiled 48-core research chip is any indication. Today’s goal is squeezing all the simple but extensive work of a data center onto a single 1.3-billion-transistor chip.Read More

Why The Good Guys Always Win

Posted By Jake Easton on February 03, 2010

Researchers say the first cowboy to draw seldom wins the duel since the brain responds faster to danger
Why The Good Guy Always Wins

Have you ever noticed that the first cowboy to draw his gun in a Hollywood Western is invariably the one to get shot? Nobel prize–winning physicist Niels Bohr did, and arranged mock duels to test the validity of this cinematic curiosity.

Following Bohr's example, researchers have now confirmed that people move faster if they are reacting to another person's movements than if they are taking the lead themselves. The findings may one day inspire new therapies for patients with brain damage.Read More

Self-Harvesting Kinetic Energy

Posted By Jake Easton on January 31, 2010

Energy-harvesting rubber nanoribbons could power cellphones, other gadgets or medical devices
Self-Harvesting Kinetic Energy

Power-generating rubber film developed by Princeton University engineers could harness natural body movements such as breathing and walking to power pacemakers, mobile phones and other electronic devices.Read More

NASA Looks Deep Inside Mars

Posted By Jake Easton on January 25, 2010

NASA's Mars exploration rover Opportunity is allowing scientists to get a glimpse deep inside Mars
NASA Gets A Look Deep Inside Mars

NASA/JPL-Caltech/Cornell

Found on a Martian plain, a dark rock not much bigger than a basketball was the target of interest for Opportunity during the past two months. Dubbed "Marquette Island," the rock is providing a better understanding of the mineral and chemical makeup of the Martian interior.Read More

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Exposing the Invisible with X-Rays

Posted By Steve Ross on January 23, 2010

X-Ray of Loader

Nick Veasey creates X-ray images that reveal the inner workings of familiar objects - from the components of a notebook computer - to the anatomy of a Boeing 747. The 747 X-Ray image took Veasey more than three months to create.Read More

Atmos Clock

Posted By Steve Ross on January 23, 2010

The Atmos clock may never need rewinding, getting its energy from small temperature changes and atmospheric pressure changes
Atmos Clock

Reinvented by Australian designer Marc Newson, its balanced design borders on minimalist. Its Baccarat crystal case houses a new movement, the Jaeger-LeCoultre 566 Calibre, which in addition to indicating the hours and minutes, also displays the month, equation of time and a splendid view of the night sky as viewed from the Northern Hemisphere. It also includes an indication of the cardinal points and astrological signs.Read More

Trapping Gases With a Wire Screen

Posted By Jake Easton on January 22, 2010

A wire screen prevents dangerous gases from exploding
trap-gases-wire-screen

A fine-mesh kitchen sieve with a candle inside simulates Humphry Davy's miner safety lamp. An explosive mixture of propane gas and air is blown in from the outside. If the mesh is fine enough, the fire will stop at the screen even as the explosive gas flows through it.Read More

Z Machine Fusion Plant

Posted By Jake Easton on January 17, 2010

Z Machine fusion could solve the world's energy shortage
Z Machine Fusion Plant

Once sparked with a relatively small electrical input, the Z Machine can produce a staggering 290 terawatts of power. That's equivalent to 80 times the world's total power output. Today, that power can only be released in a pulse lasting 70 billionths of a second - but it's a start.Read More

Telovation provides news on everything new, cool, and interesting in the world of technology, design, gadgets, inventions, and innovation.
The Telovation blog is a trademark of Radok Corporation, Scottsdale, Arizona.

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