Sunday, June 19, 2016

Someday everything will make perfect sense. So, for now, laugh at the confusion, smile through the tears and keep reminding yourself that everything happens for a reason.

Someday everything will make perfect sense. So, for now, laugh at the confusion, smile through the tears and keep reminding yourself that everything happens for a reason.


Someday everything will make perfect sense. So, for now, laugh at the confusion, smile through the tears and keep reminding yourself that everything happens for a reason.

Posted: 18 Jun 2016 11:26 PM PDT

Someday everything will make perfect sense. So, for now, laugh at the confusion, smile through the tears and keep reminding yourself that everything happens for a reason.

Someday everything will make perfect sense. So, for now, laugh at the confusion, smile through the tears and keep reminding yourself that everything happens for a reason.

The post Someday everything will make perfect sense. So, for now, laugh at the confusion, smile through the tears and keep reminding yourself that everything happens for a reason. appeared first on .

ScienceDaily: Latest Science News

ScienceDaily: Latest Science News


Tiny droplets… lead to exotic properties

Posted: 17 Jun 2016 06:54 PM PDT

Molecules in liquid crystals form exotic phases in which arrays of defects are organized into striking patterns. Confining these defect structures within droplets offers fine control that points to strategies -- not possible in bulk phases -- for assembly of responsive, adaptable materials.

Atomic sculpting with a microscope

Posted: 17 Jun 2016 06:54 PM PDT

A new tool now rests in the 3D printing toolbox. The result is designer materials with desirable structures, such as microchips, or materials with unique properties.

New surface makes oil contamination remove itself

Posted: 17 Jun 2016 01:03 PM PDT

Researchers have developed surfaces where oil transports itself to desired directions. Researchers' oleophobic surfaces are microtextured with radial arrays of undercut stripes. When oil drops fall on surfaces, drops move away from the landing point to the direction set by asymmetric geometrical patterning of the surface. The surfaces open up new avenues for power-free liquid transportation and oil contamination self-removal applications in analytical and fluidic devices.

A mathematical analysis of urban traffic models clarifies dispute over which approach is best

Posted: 17 Jun 2016 08:40 AM PDT

A long-running debate among traffic engineers has been resolved by researchers who have discovered that two seemingly very different models of traffic flow in cities actually have similar underlying mathematical structures.

Graphene-based thermal modulators

Posted: 17 Jun 2016 08:40 AM PDT

Squeezing graphene is a way to control its heat conduction, paving the way to harvesting waste heat for power.

Laser manipulates electronic properties

Posted: 17 Jun 2016 08:37 AM PDT

A new semiconducting material that is only three atomic-layers thick has emerged with more exotic, malleable electronic properties than those of traditional semiconductors.

Finding a needle in a crystalline haystack

Posted: 17 Jun 2016 07:52 AM PDT

With a new technique, scientists can detect a few large grains in a sea of small grains and study the fatigue-induced phenomena of large grain growth.

Confirmed: Heavy barium nuclei prefer a pear shape

Posted: 16 Jun 2016 11:16 AM PDT

Certain heavy barium nuclei have long been predicted to exhibit pear-like shapes. Scientists demonstrated the existence of this exotic shape by taking advantage of breakthroughs in the acceleration of radioactive beams and new detector technologies.