News
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Optical scanner shows potential for real-time 3D breast cancer screening
Scientists have developed a hand-held optical scanner with the potential to offer breast cancer imaging in real time. The results are reported today, 23rd October 2015, in the journal Biomedical Physics & Engineering Express. The device, developed primarily at Florida International University, uses a near-infrared laser diode source to produce an image of the breast […]
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Physics World wins Eddie Award
Physics World® magazine has won best "App/Digital Edition" and has also picked up an honourable mention for best "Design Cover" at the Eddie and Ozzie Awards.
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Scientists use exhaled breath to detect hypoxia
Researchers working in the United States have demonstrated a technique that may enable real-time, in-flight detection of hypoxia in pilots. The study, led by researchers at the Air Force Research Laboratory, 711th Human Performance Wing, Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio, replicated a fairly standard ‘hypoxic’ event. Volunteers were exposed to 5 minutes of reduced oxygen levels to […]
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Excess emissions from Volkswagen diesels could cause 59 early US deaths
By Liz Kalaugher, environmentalresearchweb. In September 2015, Volkswagen Group of America admitted that it had installed "defeat devices" in certain models of its diesel vehicles. Such devices, which are barred by the US Clean Air Act, assess whether the vehicle is under test and reduce emissions if so. As a result, the 482,000 vehicles in […]
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An interview with PASP Editor-in-Chief, Jeff Mangum
Earlier this year we announced a new partnership with the Astronomical Society of the Pacific (ASP) to publish their journal Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific (PASP). With IOP Publishing (IOP) now accepting submissions for PASP and in advance of us publishing the first issue in January 2016, we talk to Editor-in-Chief of […]
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Exploring the physics of a chocolate fountain
A University College London (UCL) mathematics student has worked out the secrets of how chocolate behaves in a chocolate fountain, answering the age-old question of why the falling ‘curtain’ of chocolate surprisingly pulls inwards rather than going straight downwards. The results are published today, 25th November 2015, in European Journal of Physics. “Chocolate fountains are […]
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Graphene microphone outperforms traditional nickel and offers ultrasonic reach
Scientists have developed a graphene based microphone nearly 32 times more sensitive than microphones of standard nickel-based construction. The researchers, based at the University of Belgrade, Serbia, created a vibrating membrane – the part of a condenser microphone which converts the sound to a current – from graphene, and were able to show up to […]
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IOP Publishing launches Quantum Science and Technology
Quantum information science has now become one of the fastest growing areas of research, characterised by its truly multidisciplinary nature and the significant potential it has for wide-ranging technological innovation. In response to this situation, and demand from the community itself, IOP Publishing is pleased to announce the launch of Quantum Science and TechnologyTM, a […]