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| Article 1 to 5 out of 5 concerning Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
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Scientists determine strength of 'liquid smoke'
(31 Jul 2008)
Researchers have created a 3D image of a material referred to as "liquid smoke." Aerogel, also known as liquid smoke or "San Francisco fog," is an open-cell polymer with pores smaller than 50 nanometers in diameter. For the first time, Lawrence ...
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LLNL researchers create tool to monitor nuclear reactors
(14 Mar 2008)
International inspectors may have a new tool in the form of an antineutrino detector, that could help them peer inside a working nuclear reactor. A Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory-Sandia National Laboratories' team recently demonstrated that ...
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Explosives at the microscopic scale produce shocking results
(12 Dec 2007)
U.S. troops blew up enemy bridges with explosives in World War II to slow the advance of supplies or enemy forces. In modern times, patrollers use explosives at ski resorts to purposely create avalanches so the runs are safer when skiers arrive. ...
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Researchers find metal gets stronger with three or more line dislocations
(02 May 2006)
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory researchers have discovered that three is the magic number when it comes to strengthening metals. Since the Iron Age, metallurgists have known that metals such as steel become stronger and harder the more you ...
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Nano-Probes Allow an Inside Look at Cell Nuclei
(22 Mar 2005)
Nanotechnology may be in its infancy, but biologists may soon use it to watch the inner workings of a living cell like never before. Scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) and Lawrence ...
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