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42 matches found for "centrifuge"

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Tiny Bubbles Clean Oil from Water

Now, a University of Utah engineer has developed an inexpensive new method to remove oil sheen by repeatedly pressurizing and depressurizing ozone gas, creating microscopic bubbles that attack the oil...

Life Sciences | nachricht Read more
K-State engineers strive to make algae oil production more feasible

The idea by K-State's Wenqiao "Wayne" Yuan and Zhijian "Z.J." Pei is to grow algae in the ocean on very large, supporting platforms. The National Science Foundation awarded th...

Power and Electrical Engineering | nachricht Read more
Balance organs affect brain blood flow

Dr. Jorge Serrador, from Harvard Medical School, worked with a team of researchers, including NASA scientists, to carry out the tests. He said, "While a role for the vestibular system in the auto...

Life Sciences | nachricht Read more
Experiments show 'artificial gravity' can prevent muscle loss in space

When the Apollo 11 crew got back from the moon, 40 years ago this week, they showed no ill effects from seven days spent in weightlessness. But as American astronauts and Soviet cosmonauts beg...

Health and Medicine | nachricht Read more
Rensselaer Researchers To Participate in Seismic Test of Seven-Story Building

A destructive earthquake will strike a lone, wooden condominium in Japan next week, and Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Professor Michael Symans will be on site to watch it happen.Symans is a...

Earth Sciences | nachricht Read more
Students Make Biodiesel from Waste Vegetable Oil

A group of Virginia Tech students have produced more than 200 gallons of biodiesel as part of a senior design project for the department of mechanical engineering. The Virginia Tech Bio-Fuels group is...

Power and Electrical Engineering | nachricht Read more
Inexpensive plastic used in CDs could improve aircraft, computer electronics

If one University of Houston professor has his way, the inexpensive plastic now used to manufacture CDs and DVDs will one day soon be put to use in improving the integrity of electronics in aircraft, ...

Physics and Astronomy | nachricht Read more
New Coal Dewatering Technology Turns Sludge to Powder

Because there has been no economically viable technology to remove water from ultrafine coal slurries, the ultrafine particles that are the residue of the coal cleaning process have been discarded int...

Process Engineering | nachricht Read more
ISU researchers develop technique for quick detection of salmonella

Where did the problem start? Can it be contained? Is the sickness likely to spread?Iowa State University researchers have developed a technique for testing for the presence of salmonella that ...

Health and Medicine | nachricht Read more
Caltech scientists develop 'barcode chip' for cheap, fast blood tests

The device, known as the Integrated Blood-Barcode Chip, or IBBC, was developed by a group of Caltech researchers led by James R. Heath, the Elizabeth W. Gilloon Professor and professor of chemistry, a...

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$2 egg-beater could save lives in developing countries

The low-cost centrifuge replacement can separate plasma from blood in minutes, which is used in tests to detect lethal infectious diseases responsible for half of all deaths in developing countries....

Life Sciences | nachricht Read more
Couples with fertility problems where the man is over 40 have increased difficulty in conceiving

Dr. Stéphanie Belloc, of the Eylau Centre for Assisted Reproduction, Paris, France, will say that this is the first time that such a strong paternal effect on reproductive outcomes has been shown....

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Why do astronauts suffer from space sickness?

Gravity plays a major role in our spatial orientation. Changes in gravitational forces, such as the transition to weightlessness during a space voyage, influence our spatial orientation and require ad...

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Nuclear cannibals

Nuclear energy production must increase by more than 10 percent each year from 2010 to 2050 to meet all future energy demands and replace fossil fuels, but this is an unsustainable prospect.Ac...

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Research brightens prospects for using nature’s smallest candles in medical applications

These tiny tubes are constructed from carbon atoms and they are so small that it takes about 100,000 laid side-by-side to span the width of a single human hair. In the last five years, scientists have...

Life Sciences | nachricht Read more
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