Researchers manipulated water waves to move ping pong balls and grains of rice with a level of precision that seems straight out of a sci-fi movie.
The earliest scientists first observed the waves that earthquakes produce before they could accurately describe the nature of earthquakes or their fundamental causes, as discussed in Lessons 1–5.
Waves and water are inseparable—but what if you could manipulate the waves to move floating objects? A team of international ...
A team of Earth scientists, marine biologists, oceanologists and climate change specialists affiliated with multiple ...
Those tools measure ground movement, usually from earthquakes, according to a study published in the journal Nature Communications. The most powerful waves were discovered in the Southern Ocean ...
A team of international scientists co-led by Nanyang Technological University, Singapore (NTU Singapore) have discovered a ...
Waves in the underlying layer known as the mantle ... researchers propose in the Aug. 8 Nature. The study provides a plausible origin story for enigmatic plateaus that protrude from otherwise ...
The National Practice Forum on Nature-Based Solutions was held in Irvine on February 4 and 5, and sponsored by UC Santa ...
The team’s research, published today in the journal Nature, outlines an algorithm to study neutron star mergers’ gravitational wave emissions. Once identified, astronomers around the world ...