29 place 0

724 Electrons catapult across solar materials in just 18 femtoseconds

ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily 2 place · 03/06/2026 00:49 EDT

Electrons in solar materials can be launched across molecules almost as fast as nature allows, thanks to tiny atomic vibrations acting like a “molecular catapult.” In experiments lasting just 18 femtoseconds, researchers at the University of Cambridge observed electrons blasting across a boundary in a single burst, far faster than long-standing theories predicted. Instead of slow, random movement, the electron rides the natural vibrations of the molecule itself, challenging decades of design rules for solar

To see detailed statistics for the news please log in »

Read the original

Add your comment
You must be logged in with Facebook to read and write comments.

A newsletter a day!

You may get 10 most important news around midday in daily newsletter. Press the button and we will send you the most important news only, no spam attached.

or register

LIKE us on Facebook so you won't miss the most important news of the day!

News from the same source
ScienceDaily ScienceDaily
Silicon Valley
George Avalos @ Silicon Valley 1 place · 02/07/2106 01:28 EDT

Newark apartment complex bought for much less than prior value

An East Bay apartment complex has been bought at a price that's well below its prior value. Read more

0

🔮
26.03.2026 ♈︎ Dear Aries, today will bring you a variety of impressions and important situations requiring your... Read more ›
Silicon Valley
George Avalos @ Silicon Valley 2 place · 02/07/2106 01:28 EDT

PG&E buys San Jose building to bolster South Bay operations

A PG&E Corp. unit has bought a San Jose building in a move to bolster the utility's South Bay operations. Read more

0

Skift
Sean O'Neill @ Skift 1 place · today 09:24 EDT

Hotels Warn World Cup Bookings Are Coming In Light

Many hotels are seeing soft 2026 World Cup bookings as fans seem to be waiting until the last minute. It seems possible that the event will draw a higher mix of domestic fans than many first expected. Read more

0 newcommer

ArcticStartup
Nurcin Metingil @ ArcticStartup 1 place · today 09:23 EDT

Renasens raises €10M seed

Stockholm-based deeptech startup Renasens has raised €10 million in a seed round led by Extantia, with participation from Course Corrected VC and continued backing from Norrsken Launcher, as it looks to scale its CO₂-based textile recycling technology across Europe. The company is tackling a persistent bottleneck in the industry—processing blended and treated fabrics—by using modified […] Read more

0 newcommer

CoinDesk
CoinDesk Indices @ CoinDesk 1 place · today 09:18 EDT

CoinDesk 20 performance update: index falls 3.2% as all constituents trade lower

Aave (AAVE) declined 5.6% and Cardano (ADA) dropped 4.8%, leading the index lower from Wednesday. Read more

0 newcommer

Habr
avalevich (AGIMA) @ Habr 1 place · today 09:17 EDT

SOLID в реальном мире: SRP без архитектурных космолетов

Всем доброго дня! На связи Валевич Артем, тимлид в AGIMA. Рано или поздно каждый разработчик сталкивается с необходимостью изучить принципы SOLID. Интернет полон теоретических статей с абстрактными примерами — треугольниками, фигурами и системами заказов. В таких примерах всё выглядит красиво. Но когда дело доходит до продакшен-кода, возникает логичный вопрос: как применять эти принципы на практике и не превратить проект в архитектурный космолет? Разбираемся.Дисклеймер: статья предназначена для новичков, ко Read more

0 newcommer

Habr
Hockenberry @ Habr 2 place · today 09:15 EDT

От нуля до продакшена: как команда без ML-экспертизы построила AI-ассистента для звонков

Привет, Хабр! Я техлид группы разработки шины обмена данных в компании «Передовые Платежные Решения». И помимо этого, неформальный лидер команды внутренних ИИ проектов. В статье хочу поделиться нашим опытом внедрения ИИ с нуля: как за 6 месяцев команда из 12 разработчиков (backend, без опыта с ML/ AI) создала и вывела в пилот голосового ИИ-ассистента. Статья может быть полезна компаниям, которые с интересом смотрят на внедрение ИИ, и выбирают между «сделать... Read more

0 newcommer

Habr
ignatenkosergey @ Habr 3 place · today 09:15 EDT

Как заставить LLM считать точно: генерация кода вместо генерации ответов

Недавно в популярном Facebook-посте: «GPT работает всё хуже. Просишь пересчитать формулу на 600 грамм, он бодро выдаёт две по 300. Пора, видимо, валить».Проблема знакомая каждому, кто пытался использовать LLM для расчётов. Но это не деградация конкретной модели. Это фундаментальное ограничение архитектуры. И у него есть решение. Читать далее Read more

0 newcommer

Business Insider
Thibault Spirlet @ Business Insider 1 place · today 09:12 EDT

The US needs a blue-collar workforce boom to compete in AI, Meta president says

"When we talk about America and how critical it is that we're competitive in the AI race, we need a whole new workforce," Meta's president said. Read more

0 fresh

Tech.eu
Cate Lawrence @ Tech.eu 1 place · today 09:10 EDT

Bioniq cashes in on personalised health boom with $150M Herbalife acquisition

Bioniq, creator of personalised supplements based on blood biomarker analysis, has entered into an agreement for the sale of its assets to global nutrition company Herbalife. Founded in 2019, Bioniq d... Read more

0 fresh

Habr
tsalkin (MWS Cloud) @ Habr · today 09:09 EDT

Базовый минимум или роскошный максимум: как устроен IaaS в MWS Cloud Platform

За время работы в облаке я убедился в одной простой вещи: сколько бы сервисов ни предлагало облако — Kubernetes, Serverless, базы данных, Big Data или AI-сервисы, — всё это работает только потому, что под ними есть прочный фундамент: виртуальные машины, диски и сети. Этот фундамент и называется IaaS. Он важен и для клиентов, и для самого облачного провайдера: все сервисы строятся поверх него, а уровень этой базы определяет надёжность и... Read more

0 fresh

The Verge
Sheena Vasani @ The Verge 1 place · today 09:07 EDT

Some of our favorite Apple tech is cheaper than ever during Amazon’s Big Spring Sale

It feels like nearly everything is receiving some sort of discount as part of Amazon’s Big Spring Sale — that is, except for most Apple devices. Don’t worry, though; you’re not completely out of luck if you’re on the hunt for discounted Apple gear. We found several noteworthy Apple deals while sifting through Amazon’s catalog […] Read more

0 fresh

Silicon Canals
James Brennan @ Silicon Canals 1 place · today 09:06 EDT

8 things my failed startup at 28 taught me that four years of business school never could

At twenty-eight, I co-founded my second startup with real funding, a real team, and more confidence than the situation probably warranted. By the time it collapsed, I’d had more uncomfortable conversations than I’d had in the decade before it. I’d let people down. I’d let myself down. What surprised me wasn’t the failure itself. What ... Read more Read more

0 fresh

Tom's Hardware
Tom's Hardware 1 place · today 09:05 EDT

Super Micro shareholders sue company over securities fraud after AI chip smuggling bust — furious investors say company concealed dependence on illicit sales to China

Supermicro shareholders argue that the company committed securities fraud because it did not tell them that illegal activities made up a huge portion of its sales and that it had issues with export controls compliance. Read more

0 fresh

CNET
Mike Sorrentino @ CNET 1 place · today 09:01 EDT

WhatsApp's New Update Makes it Easier to Switch Phones, Free Up Storage

Your chat history will be easier to transfer from iPhone to Android, and it's easier to delete large media files from your conversations. Read more

0 newcommer

The most popular news from the same source for the last week
ScienceDaily ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 03/19/2026 19:40 EDT

Carrying extra fat around the waist may be more dangerous than the number on the scale suggests. Researchers found that belly fat was more strongly linked to heart failure risk than BMI, even in people with normal weight. Inflammation seems to play a key role, helping explain why this type of fat is especially harmful. Measuring waist size could offer a simple way to detect hidden risk earlier. Read more

0

ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 03/19/2026 20:54 EDT

Eating large amounts of ultra-processed foods like chips, frozen meals, sugary drinks, and packaged snacks may significantly raise the risk of serious heart problems. In a major U.S. study, people consuming around nine servings per day had a 67% higher risk of heart attacks, strokes, or death from heart disease compared to those eating about one serving. The risk didn’t just jump at high levels either. Each additional daily serving... Read more

0

ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 03/19/2026 21:52 EDT

Ravens have long been thought to follow wolves to find food, but new research shows they’re far more strategic. By tracking both animals in Yellowstone, scientists discovered that ravens memorize areas where wolf kills are likely and fly directly to those spots—sometimes from great distances. Rather than trailing wolves, they rely on learned patterns in the landscape. It’s a clever system that highlights just how intelligent these birds really are. Read more

0

ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 03/19/2026 23:08 EDT

Stopping popular weight-loss injections like Ozempic or Mounjaro might not trigger the dramatic rebound many fear. A large real-world study of nearly 8,000 patients found that most people who discontinue these drugs manage to keep the weight off—or even continue losing—by restarting treatment, switching medications, or adopting lifestyle changes. While earlier clinical trials suggested rapid weight regain, this new evidence paints a more hopeful picture. Read more

0

ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 03/19/2026 23:37 EDT

A common oral bacterium tied to gum disease may help spark and fuel breast cancer, according to new research. Scientists discovered it can travel through the bloodstream to breast tissue, where it causes DNA damage and speeds tumor growth and spread. It also appears to make cancer cells more aggressive and resistant to therapy. The effect is even stronger in people with BRCA1 mutations, raising new questions about the role... Read more

0

ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 03/20/2026 04:31 EDT

Researchers have created a cutting-edge catalyst that turns CO2 into methanol more efficiently than ever before. Instead of using clumps of metal atoms, they engineered a system where each single indium atom actively drives the reaction. This dramatically reduces energy needs while making the process easier to study and optimize. The result could accelerate the shift toward cleaner fuels and sustainable chemical production. Read more

0

ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 03/20/2026 04:43 EDT

A nearby galaxy is behaving strangely—and now scientists know why. The Small Magellanic Cloud’s stars move in chaotic patterns because it slammed into its larger neighbor millions of years ago. That collision disrupted its structure and even created the illusion that its gas was rotating. The discovery means this once “textbook” galaxy may not be as typical as astronomers believed. Read more

0

ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 03/20/2026 06:01 EDT

A mysterious spike of platinum buried deep in Greenland’s ice has long fueled theories of a catastrophic comet or asteroid strike 12,800 years ago—possibly triggering a sudden return to icy conditions known as the Younger Dryas. But new research points to a far less dramatic, yet still powerful culprit: volcanic eruptions. Scientists found the platinum signal doesn’t match space debris and actually appeared decades after the cooling began, ruling out... Read more

0

ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 03/20/2026 07:49 EDT

Many people believe closing their eyes sharpens hearing, but that is not always true. In noisy settings, participants struggled more to hear faint sounds with their eyes closed, while matching visuals made it easier. Researchers found that shutting the eyes leads the brain to over-filter incoming sounds. Keeping your eyes open may actually improve how well you hear in noise. Read more

0

ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 03/20/2026 07:59 EDT

Scientists have found a way to make one of the most aggressive brain tumors vulnerable to the immune system. A single injection of a modified virus can invade glioblastoma, kill cancer cells, and summon immune fighters deep into the tumor. These immune cells persist and attack, which was linked to longer survival in patients. Read more

0

Most popular sources

  • You see 997 news out of 1,000.
  • Sources 61 out of 61.
AlleyWatch 0%
Ubergizmo 0%
StartupNation 0%
StartUp Beat 0%
Mobile ID World 0%
View sources »

LIKE us on Facebook so you won't miss the most important news of the day!

26.03.2026 09:39
Last update: 09:30 EDT.
News rating updated: 15:32.

What is Times42?

Times42 brings you the most popular news from tech news portals in real-time chart.
Read about us in FAQ section.


Times42 © 2026