Tag Archives: APS Physics

How Lasers Could Build Heavy Elements

Laser-generated nucleosynthesis remains out of reach of present-day technology—but more powerful lasers could eventually make it possible. Continue reading

Posted in APS Physics | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Explaining Mars’ Patchy Aurora

The solar wind’s orientation relative to Mars’ magnetic-field lines changes as the planet rotates, creating conditions ripe for magnetic reconnection. Continue reading

Posted in APS Physics | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Hot Surfaces Make Droplets Move Erratically

A droplet of a volatile liquid can move on a uniformly heated surface thanks to a nonuniform evaporation effect that drives an unstable fluid flow within the droplet. Continue reading

Posted in APS Physics | Tagged , | Leave a comment

How Fur Frustrates Fouling

A hair’s resistance to dirt depends on how much it deforms in a flowing fluid. Read more in APS Physics… Continue reading

Posted in APS Physics | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Water Reduces Ground Coffee’s Charge

Adding water to coffee beans before grinding can reduce the buildup of static charge—and make a stronger espresso. Continue reading

Posted in APS Physics | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Why Humidity Doesn’t Affect Drying Paint

Experiments verify a theory that explains why paint doesn’t dry any faster on a dry day than on a wet day. Continue reading

Posted in APS Physics | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Solid-State Physicist Turns to Rocks

An archaeology-focused sabbatical prompted semiconductor physicist Kristin Poduska to ask questions about how the environment impacts the chemical and structural properties of natural materials. Continue reading

Posted in APS Physics | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Tension Remodeling Resolves Tissue Architecture Question

A dynamical tension model captures how cells swap places with their neighbors in epithelial tissues, explaining observed phase transitions and cellular architectures. Continue reading

Posted in APS Physics | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

It’s a Trap—for Lanthanides

Trapping and imaging single dysprosium atoms extends the utility of optical tweezer arrays to electronically complex species, opening the door to new quantum physics studies. Continue reading

Posted in APS Physics | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Binary Colloids Don’t Flock Together

A homogenous mixture of two self-propelling species first forms a polar vortex and then spontaneously demixes, thanks to a difference in speeds and other competing effects. Continue reading

Posted in APS Physics | Tagged , | Leave a comment