Browse Physics
Valid search terms include: subject, keyword, author of article, author of highlighted article, article citation (e.g. Physics 3, 16 (2011))
101.
Theorists created a gravitational model that is mathematically analogous to one for a standard superconducting device, extending the ways that the tools of general relativity can lead to insights into condensed matter physics.
102.
Complex structures appear spontaneously in a plasma in a strong magnetic field. The work explores a new regime of plasma behavior that could be relevant for industry and demonstrates a new technique for imaging plasma dynamics.
103.
Scratching steel and other materials is unexpectedly dominated by a process of cutting rather than pressing, according to new experiments and analytical modeling.
104.
Experiments show that the tumbling of gas molecules has a significant effect on the energies of electrons they eject in response to x rays.
105.
Radiation pressure from an ordinary, DVD-scale laser can make a dimple on a liquid’s surface.
106.
Liquid sodium agitated gently in a rotating tank can significantly amplify a magnetic field. The experiment is the first step toward demonstrating a self-sustaining field in a low-turbulence fluid, which may be analogous to Earth’s core.
107.
Focus
108.
Focus
109.
Focus
110.
Theorists can mathematically construct waves that propagate on straight-line paths through environments with many obstacles that would ordinarily cause scattering.
111.
The idea of inflation–an exponential expansion of the universe in its first moments–was published in 1981, in a paper that imported new ideas from particle physics into theoretical cosmology.
112.
Focus
113.
LISA, a future gravitational wave detector, could find evidence that the early universe had fewer than three spatial dimensions.
114.
A material filled with nanometer-sized particles could deform dramatically in a magnetic field. It may lead to improved magnetic materials for devices.
115.
Experiments show that the spin of an electron can cause its path to curve as it moves through a semiconductor, even in the absence of scattering, which may be important for future devices.
116.
Focus
117.
The complex topography of a crumpled piece of paper has only two basic types of regions, and they can be combined to build up the whole surface, according to calculations.
118.
Time travel isn’t forbidden by physical laws. A new consistency condition for time traveling quantum states eliminates any possibility of so-called grandfather paradoxes, in which a time-traveler kills her own ancestor.
119.
Focus
120.
Electrons confined to a layer floating above liquid helium move in an orderly way through a constriction because their repulsion forces them to keep their distance from one another.
