Chemistry

  1. Chemistry

    BPA-free plastic may host BPA-like chemical, teen finds

    Something has to replace the BPA in ‘BPA-free’ plastics. A teen has been probing what that is.

    By
  2. Chemistry

    Cool Jobs: Counting calories

    Do calories count? A nutrition label doesn’t tell the whole story. Meet three researchers working to shed light on the complex connections between food and health.

    By
  3. Chemistry

    Steady heartbeats may depend on white blood cells

    Biologists have just found a new role for germ-fighting white blood cells. In the heart they appear to serve as pacemakers so that the heart beats regularly.

    By
  4. Earth

    Beyond diamonds: Search is on for rare carbon crystals

    A search for previously undiscovered carbon minerals was announced in December 2015. Researchers have begun finding a handful and are actively scouting for dozens more.

    By
  5. Chemistry

    Scientists Say: Isotope

    An isotope is a variety of an element that has the same number of protons but a different number of neutrons — or neutrally charged particles.

    By
  6. Chemistry

    Scientists know that you pee in the pool

    A new way to find urine in pools and hot tubs measures the concentration of an artificial sweetener in the water.

    By
  7. Chemistry

    Scientists Say: Atomic number

    How do you know where an element sits in the periodic table? Count its protons to get its atomic number.

    By
  8. Environment

    Did your burger come with a side of non-degrading pollutants?

    Perfluorinated compounds pollute the environment and might harm human health. A new study shows that one place they often show up is the paper and cardboard used to package fast foods.

    By
  9. Chemistry

    Explainer: What is a catalyst?

    Catalysts are used in manufacturing and many technologies. They’re also found in living things. They help chemical reactions move along.

    By
  10. Chemistry

    Scientists claim to have turned hydrogen into a metal

    Most people know hydrogen as a gas. But under high pressure, scientists now think they’ve converted it into a reflective metal. Not everyone is convinced.

    By
  11. Tech

    Magnets may one day cull deadly germs from blood

    A new technique for slowing the deadly condition called sepsis would use tiny iron particles and magnets.

    By
  12. Tech

    How to spin synthetic spider silk

    A new method for spinning artificial spider silk combines parts of proteins from two species and mimics what happens in a spider’s silk-forming gland.

    By