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Showing releases 1-25 out of 43 releases.
Click to go to page: [ 1 | 2 ]

Public Release: 13-May-2009
Environmental Science & Technology
Natural petroleum seeps release equivalent of eight to 80 Exxon Valdez oil spills
A new study by researchers at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution and the University of California, Santa Barbara is the first to quantify the amount of oil residue in seafloor sediments that result from natural petroleum seeps off Santa Barbara, Calif.
US Department of Energy, National Science Foundation, Seaver Institute

Contact: Stephanie Murphy
media@whoi.edu
508-289-3340
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

Public Release: 13-May-2009
Nature
MIT reels in RNA surprise with microbial ocean catch
An ingenious new method of obtaining marine microbe samples while preserving the microbes' natural gene expression has yielded an unexpected boon: the presence of many varieties of small RNAs -- snippets of RNA that act as switches to regulate gene expression in these single-celled creatures, MIT researchers report in the May 14 issue of Nature. Before now, small RNA could only be studied in lab-cultured microorganisms.
Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, National Science Foundation, US Department of Energy

Contact: Elizabeth Thomson
thomson@mit.edu
617-258-5402
Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Public Release: 13-May-2009
Nature
A Penn physics study: Of traffic jams, beach sands and the zero-temperature jamming transition
Researchers in condensed matter physics at the University of Pennsylvania and the University of Chicago have created an experimental and computer model to study how jamming, the physical process in which collections of particles are crammed together to behave as solids, might affect the behavior of systems in which thermal motion is important, such as molecules in a glass.
US Department of Energy, National Science Foundation

Contact: Jordan Reese
jreese@upenn.edu
215-573-6604
University of Pennsylvania

Public Release: 12-May-2009
Compact cancer-therapy particle-delivery system patented
As part of an effort to make high-precision particle cancer therapy accessible to more patients, a physicist at the US Department of Energy's Brookhaven National Laboratory has developed a simpler, less-expensive gantry design for delivering tumor-killing particle beams. Brookhaven Science Associates, the company that manages the Lab for DOE, has applied for a US nonprovisional patent on the design, which is now available for licensing and commercial development.
US Department of Energy

Contact: Karen McNulty Walsh
kmcnulty@bnl.gov
631-344-8350
DOE/Brookhaven National Laboratory

Public Release: 11-May-2009
DOE names Caltech professor as director of EFRC focusing on light-material interactions
The US Department of Energy Office of Science has announced that it will fund the creation of 46 Energy Frontier Research Centers over the next five years, including one that will be housed at the California Institute of Technology. That EFRC will be headed by Harry Atwater, the Howard Hughes Professor and professor of applied physics and materials science.
US Department of Energy

Contact: Lori Oliwenstein
lorio@caltech.edu
626-395-3631
California Institute of Technology

Public Release: 11-May-2009
EVS 24
Michael Kintner-Meyer proposes value of smart charging at EVS24
Dr. Michael Kintner-Meyer proposes the value of smart charging technology developed at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.

Contact: Anne Haas
anne.haas@pnl.gov
509-375-3732
DOE/Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Public Release: 11-May-2009
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
River delta areas can provide clue to environmental changes, Texas A&M prof says
Sediments released by many of the world's largest river deltas to the global oceans have been changed drastically in the last 50 years, largely as a result of human activity, says a Texas A&M University researcher.
NASA, US Department of Energy, US Office of Naval Research, National Science Foundation

Contact: Thomas Bianchi
tbianchi@tamu.edu
979-845-5137
Texas A&M University

Public Release: 8-May-2009
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
High-pressure compound could be key to hydrogen-powered vehicles
A hydrogen-rich compound discovered by Stanford researchers may help overcome one of the biggest hurdles to using hydrogen for fuel -- namely, how do you stuff enough hydrogen into a volume small enough to be practical for powering a car? The newly discovered material is a form of ammonia borane. Working at high pressure in an atmosphere artificially enriched with hydrogen, the scientists were able to ratchet up the hydrogen content by roughly 50 percent.
US Department of Energy

Contact: Louis Bergeron
louisb3@stanford.edu
650-725-1944
Stanford University

Public Release: 8-May-2009
Grant supports Boston College physicists in 1 of country's new energy frontier research centers
A US Department of Energy grant to enhance the nation's energy security will team Boston College physicists Zhifeng Ren and Cyril Opeil, SJ, with colleagues from MIT and Oak Ridge National Laboratory.
US Department of Energy

Contact: Ed Hayward
ed.hayward@bc.edu
617-552-4826
Boston College

Public Release: 8-May-2009
Physical Review D
The day the universe froze
Imagine a time when the entire universe froze. According to a new model for dark energy, that is essentially what happened about 11.5 billion years ago, when the universe was a quarter of the size it is today.
US Department of Energy

Contact: David F. Salisbury
david.salisbury@vanderbilt.edu
615-343-6803
Vanderbilt University

Public Release: 7-May-2009
Third International Conference of Magnetic Refrigeration
Experts on magnetic cooling to converge on Des Moines
Experts from around the globe will be converging on Des Moines May 12-15 to discuss the state of the art of magnetic refrigeration. Scientists and industry representatives will be attending the Third International Conference on Magnetic Refrigeration, Thermag III, which is being hosted by the US Department of Energy's Ames Laboratory and Iowa State University.

Contact: Kerry Gibson
kgibson@ameslab.gov
515-294-1405
DOE/Ames Laboratory

Public Release: 7-May-2009
Report examines limits of national power grid simulations
The report, "National Power Grid Simulation Capability: Needs and Issues," examines shortcomings in the nation's current capabilities for simulating the national power grid.
US Department of Homeland Security

Contact: Eleanor Taylor
etaylor@anl.gov
630-252-5510
DOE/Argonne National Laboratory

Public Release: 6-May-2009
Global Biogeochemical Cycles
Ocean carbon: A dent in the iron hypothesis
Oceanographers in the Earth Sciences Division of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory analyzed data from deep-diving Carbon Explorer floats that reported continuously for over a year following the SOFeX iron-fertilization experiment in the Southern Ocean. Most of the carbon from lush plankton blooms, both artificially fertilized and natural, never reached the deep ocean.
Biological and Environmental Research Program, US Department of Energy, National Oceanographic Partnership Program, US Office of Naval Research

Contact: Paul Preuss
paul_preuss@lbl.gov
510-486-6249
DOE/Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Public Release: 6-May-2009
Story tips From the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory -- May 2009
The SNS has added another instrument to its eventual suite of 25. Wide tires on tractor-trailers can reduce the weight of a rig. In one of the largest experiments of its kind, thousands of cottonwood cuttings planted in common gardens in British Columbia, Oregon and California will help scientists determine which strains are best suited for cellulosic ethanol production. Fusion energy took a small step forward with a successful simulation performed on ORNL's Jaguar supercomputer.

Contact: Ron Walli
wallira@ornl.gov
865-576-0226
DOE/Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Public Release: 6-May-2009
Physical Review Letters
Star crust 10 billion times stronger than steel, IU physicist finds
Research by a theoretical physicist at Indiana University shows that the crusts of neutron stars are 10 billion times stronger than steel or any other of the earth's strongest metal alloys.
US Department of Energy

Contact: Steve Chaplin
stjchap@indiana.edu
812-856-1896
Indiana University

Public Release: 5-May-2009
Princeton to receive $20 million to establish Energy Frontier Research Center
Princeton University will be home to a new $20 million energy research center for combustion science, as part of a federal initiative to spur discoveries that lay the groundwork for an economy based on clean replacements for fossil fuels.
US Department of Energy

Contact: Chris Emery
cemery@princeton.edu
609-258-4597
Princeton University, Engineering School

Public Release: 4-May-2009
Physical Review Letters
Nano-sandwich triggers novel electron behavior
A lattice of vanadium dioxide molecules just six atoms thick in which electrons appear to be guided by conflicting laws of physics depending on their direction of travel has been modeled by a team of physicists at the University of California, Davis. Its unique properties could open up a new world of possibilities in the emerging field of spintronics technology, which takes advantage of the magnetic as well as the electric properties of electrons in the design of novel electronic devices.
US Department of Energy

Contact: Liese Greensfelder
lgreensfelder@ucdavis.edu
530-752-6101
University of California - Davis

Public Release: 4-May-2009
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Scientists determine the structure of highly efficient light-harvesting molecules in green bacteria
An international science team has determined the structure of chlorophyll molecules in green bacteria, which are super-efficient at harvesting light energy. Because the interactions that lead to the assembly of the chlorophyll molecules are rather simple, so they provide good models for designing artificial systems. The research one day could be used to build artificial photosynthetic systems, such as those that convert solar energy to electrical energy.
US Department of Energy

Contact: Barbara K. Kennedy
science@psu.edu
814-863-4682
Penn State

Public Release: 1-May-2009
SIAM 2009 Annual Meeting
Two Argonne mathematicians recognized as SIAM Fellows
Hans G. Kaper and Jorge Moré, both researchers from the US Department of Energy's Argonne National Laboratory, have been named Fellows of the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (SIAM).

Contact: Eleanor Taylor
etaylor@anl.gov
630-252-5510
DOE/Argonne National Laboratory

Public Release: 1-May-2009
Nature Materials
Blurring the lines between magic and science: Berkeley researchers create an 'invisibility cloak'
Never mind Harry Potter, researchers at Berkeley have made an invisibility cloak of their own. A team led by Xiang Zhang of Berkeley Lab and UC Berkeley has taken a major step towards a true invisibility device with the creation of a carpet cloak from nanostructured silicon that conceals the presence of objects placed under it from optical detection.
US Department of Energy

Contact: Lynn Yarris
lcyarris@lbl.gov
510-486-5375
DOE/Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Public Release: 1-May-2009
Windpower 2009 Conference & Exhibition
'Smart turbine blades' to improve wind power
Researchers have developed a technique that uses sensors and computational software to constantly monitor forces exerted on wind turbine blades, a step toward improving efficiency by adjusting for rapidly changing wind conditions. Findings will be presented on May 4 during a wind-power conference in Chicago. The research by engineers at Purdue University and Sandia National Laboratories is part of an effort to develop a smarter wind turbine structure.
US Department of Energy

Contact: Emil Venere
venere@purdue.edu
765-494-4709
Purdue University

Public Release: 1-May-2009
Ecological Monographs
Plants could override climate change effects on wildfires
Rising temperatures may lead to more tinder-dry vegetation, but that doesn't mean there will be a higher risk for wildfires in a particular area.

Contact: Anne Stark
stark8@llnl.gov
925-422-9799
DOE/Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

Public Release: 30-Apr-2009
Nano Letters
Sandia researchers construct carbon nanotube device that can detect colors of the rainbow
Researchers at Sandia National Laboratories have created the first carbon nanotube device that can detect the entire visible spectrum of light, a feat that could soon allow scientists to probe single molecule transformations, study how those molecules respond to light, observe how the molecules change shapes, and understand other fundamental interactions between molecules and nanotubes.

Contact: Mike Janes
mejanes@sandia.gov
925-294-2447
DOE/Sandia National Laboratories

Public Release: 30-Apr-2009
Smart Charger Controller simplifies electric vehicle recharging
PNNL's Smart Charger Controller automatically recharges electric vehicles during times of least cost to the consumer and lower demand for power.
US Department of Energy

Contact: Annie Haas
anne.haas@pnl.gov
509-375-3732
DOE/Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Public Release: 29-Apr-2009
DOE to establish Energy Frontier Research Center at PNNL
The DOE plans to award $22.5 million over five years for PNNL's new Center for Molecular Electrocatalysis, where scientists will study molecules called catalysts that convert electrical energy into chemical bonds and back again. Of interest are catalysts that pack energy into bonds involving hydrogen, oxygen or nitrogen. These reactions are at the core of technologies such as solar energy and fuel cells.
US Department of Energy

Contact: Mary Beckman
mary.beckman@pnl.gov
509-375-3688
DOE/Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Showing releases 1-25 out of 43 releases.
    Click to go to page: [ 1 | 2 ]

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Features

A wealth of liquid fuel right under our feet

A wealth of liquid fuel right under our feet

INL has partnered with Baard Energy to design one of the nation's first coal-to-liquids plants, a project that could help power the US transportation system without relying on foreign oil.

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NREL gearbox study aims to grease wind power's future

NREL gearbox study aims to grease wind power's future

Wind turbines are designed to last 20 years. But gearboxes and other key components are wearing out sooner. Engineers at NREL's National Wind Technology Center are working with industry to discover why and retool the design process to improve reliability, reduce the cost and help the nation reach its clean energy potential.

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