Interesting Engineering on MSN
US: Newton’s third law of motion broken by new time crystal built using sound waves
Physicists at New York University in the US have built a new kind of ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Sound waves could be used to remotely reprogram material stiffness, from implants to robotic muscles
A team of researchers co-led by the University of California San Diego, University of Michigan, and the French National ...
Ultra high-frequency sound transmits energy through flesh and other materials that block light or heat used in conventional 3D printing. Stephen Shankland worked at CNET from 1998 to 2024 and wrote ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Sound waves may let researchers remotely tune material stiffness on demand
A team co-led by UC San Diego and the University of Michigan reports that short pulses of sound could remotely drag a structural defect through a metamaterial lattice, potentially letting researchers ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Scientists use sound to control material behavior, could help devices adjust stiffness
Researchers have uncovered a way to control material behavior using sound. In a study ...
It’s a question I’m sure was keeping you up at night: can you make an object spin with a sound wave? The answer, generally speaking, used to be no. Now, though, mechanical engineers have taken a look ...
Be it water, light or sound: waves usually propagate in the same way forwards as in the backward direction. As a consequence, when we are speaking to someone standing some distance away from us, that ...
Absorbing excess sound to make public environments like theaters and concert halls safer for hearing and using the unwanted sound waves to create electricity is the aim of a new paper. The authors ...
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