Matter and Its Interactions

  1. Materials Science

    Beetles offer people lessons in moisture control

    Taking tricks from a beetle, researchers are designing surfaces that collect water from the air or resist frost buildup.

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  2. Archaeology

    The first farmers were two groups, not one

    The humans that began farming 10,000 years ago in the Fertile Crescent may have been two cultures living side-by-side.

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  3. Environment

    Something in plastics may be weakening kids’ teeth

    The body can confuse some pollutants for a natural hormone. Researchers in France now find such pollutant exposures in childhood may lead cells to make defective tooth enamel.

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  4. Earth

    Helium discovery blows away shortage worries

    Fears that the world may soon run out of helium have been set aside for now by the finding of a huge reservoir of the gas in East Africa.

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  5. Chemistry

    Gasp! At the movies, your breaths reveal your emotions

    Researchers took air samples as they screened movies. What people exhaled were linked to film scenes’ emotional tone, they found.

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  6. Tech

    Clear, stretchy sensor could lead to wearable electronics

    Researchers have combined plastics and metal to make a transparent, stretchable sensor. It could soon find use in touchscreens, wearable electronics and more.

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  7. Chemistry

    Scientists Say: Cyanide

    Cyanides are poisonous. But they are more than that. This group of compounds is used in everything from mining to capturing fish.

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  8. Chemistry

    The newest elements finally have names

    Nihonium? Tennessine? These aren’t body parts or medicines. They’re among the names just given to the four newest superheavy elements.

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  9. Archaeology

    Neandertals: Ancient Stone Age builders had tech skills

    Neandertals built stalagmite circles in a French cave 176,500 years ago. These structures show that these ancient human cousins had social and technical skills.

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  10. Chemistry

    Scientists Say: Acidification

    When a solution becomes more acidic, it’s acidifying. And that’s not always a good thing.

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  11. Physics

    Scientists Say: Absolute zero

    Even when we think it’s cold out, most molecules are moving. Only at absolute zero will all of their motions stop.

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  12. Materials Science

    Nanowires could lead to super-long-lived battery

    Scientists have long been looking for ways to make rechargeable batteries that last forever. They now may be close. Their solution: gel-dipped nanowires.

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