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Electric eels (Electrophorus spp. for Latin purists) are one of those fishes that pique the interest in biology of even the ...
It sounds like a magic trick, but it's simply physics. Power shows up in surprising places: bend ordinary ice and you can ...
4h
Interesting Engineering on MSNNew liquid air storage system bottles electricity on demand, producing 10 tons daily
When demand spikes, the air is warmed again. As it rapidly expands about 700 times its liquid volume, the pressure drives ...
4d
Front Page Detectives on MSNScientists stunned after realizing bending ice can generate electricity
Researchers noted that when the ice block bent, the electricity readings undertaken aligned with those observed during ...
7h
ZME Science on MSNWhen Ice Gets Bent, It Sparks: A Surprising Source of Electricity in Nature’s Coldest Corners
The strength of the ice’s flexoelectric effect is on par with titanium dioxide and strontium titanate, two ceramic materials ...
Ice that melts and moves on its own? Tiny grooves make it possible, showing new ways to power, move, and clear without motors or pumps.
The study published in Nature Physics shows that ice, one of the most common substances on Earth, may hold the key to ...
In a world chasing cleaner energy, a group of physicists may have uncovered a surprising new way to make power: by tapping into the Earth's own rotation. That's right, researchers at Princeton ...
The few wealthy countries of Germany, Australia, Great Britain, New Zealand, other EU countries, and the USA, representing less than one of the eight billion on Planet Earth, are mandating social ...
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