Heriot-Watt researchers build black hole simulation in lab0
- From Around the Web, Science & Technology
- December 28, 2016
Researchers at Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh have built their own “black hole” in the laboratory.

Researchers at Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh have built their own “black hole” in the laboratory.

Scientists, including several from the University of California, Riverside, have developed a transparent, self-healing, highly stretchable conductive material that can be electrically activated to power artificial muscles and could be used to improve batteries, electronic devices, and robots.

Towards the cornucopia of meaningful leads: applying deep adversarial autoencoders for new molecule development in oncology

A tiny organism at the base of the food chain, but vital for life to exist on Earth, is under threat, according to data collected by a NASA satellite that has been firing a laser into the ocean for a decade.

In the new year, there are companies making apps that will bring augmented reality to become easily accessible to everyone

Repeated wave blasts suggest nondestructive event as source

A star with a strange composition has been spotted and astronomers think that it has just eaten an exoplanetary lunch.

Google Lunar X-Prize contestant Team HAKUTO has a promising rover that will be launched to the moon in the new year.

Days before Christmas, a research scientist at an Ontario university has created a microscopic figure he’s calling the world’s “smallest snowman.”

Researchers have discovered that tantalum carbide and hafnium carbide materials can withstand scorching temperatures of nearly 4000 degrees Celsius.





























































