Tag Archives: kinetic energy
Powerful microscopy technique brings proteins into focus
Cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) as a technology has become more important because the field that it revolutionised – structural biology – has become more important. The international scientific community had this rise in fortunes, so to speak, acknowledged when the Nobel … Continue reading
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Tagged ACE2, covalent bonds, cryo-electron microscopy, cryo-EM, direct electron detector, elastic scattering, Falcon 4, field emission gun, GABA, inelastic scattering, Joachim Frank, kinetic energy, mouse apoferritin, Nobel Prize for Chemistry, novel coronavirus, sampling frequency, signal-to-noise ratio, structural biology, Thermo Fisher Scientific, X-ray crystallography
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Where is the coolest lab in the universe?
The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) performs an impressive feat every time it accelerates billions of protons to nearly the speed of light – and not in terms of the energy alone. For example, you release more energy when you clap … Continue reading
Posted in Scicomm
Tagged blue hypergiant, Boomerang Nebula, Bose-Einstein condensate, cosmic microwave background, energy density, Eta Carinae, gas outflow, heat, International Space Station, kinetic energy, Large Hadron Collider, Nature News, red giant, temperature, thermal equilibrium, thermodynamics, vacuum, Vladivostok, white dwarf, Wolfgang Ketterle
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