A trio of US researchers claim to have successfully tested predictions that it's possible to harvest clean energy from the ...
Nearly two centuries after Faraday's failed attempts, scientists have demonstrated that Earth's continuous spin can directly ...
Quantum Hall is the quantum-level version of the Hall effect: a voltage produced as electrons flow through a magnetic field. In two-dimensional materials and at low temperatures the quantum ...
Scientists know well how conventional materials conduct heat. However, things are not as straightforward under extreme ...
Contrary to previous assumptions, the Moon's passage through Earth's magnetic field, or "geotail," does not lead to lower plasma densities. Listen to Story Scientists from the Space Physics Laboratory ...
Institute of Quantum Materials and Devices, School of Materials Science and Engineering, State Key Laboratory of Separation Membranes and Membrane Processes, Tiangong University, Tianjin 300387, China ...
In numerous stone selection games among amateur Go players in the artificial magnetic field setting, the analyses of stone selection rate by trials and steps for decision-making pinpointed the ...
Recently, a research team found a new way to control the magnetic reversal in a special material called Co 3 Sn 2 S 2, a Weyl semimetal. The team was led by Prof. Qu Zhe from the Hefei Institutes ...
On a dynamic planet like Earth, it can be easy for drivers of change to go unnoticed – but scientists have now established and investigated an unexpected link between the Sun and our homeworld.
"If the heat extraction becomes less symmetric, this is thought to lead to a magnetic field reversal." A reversal would see the geomagnetic field temporarily weaken—and might also impact ...
The continuous update of the archeomagnetic database spanning the last 3,000 years has facilitated the refinement of geomagnetic field models, unveiling the presence of significant non-dipolar ...
Diamond Light Source, Harwell Science and Innovation Campus, Didcot OX11 0DE, U.K. Clarendon Laboratory, Department of Physics, University of Oxford, Oxford OX1 3PU, U.K.