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Communique Newsletter: July 28, 2022
A handful of physicists has prepared the detector for a more sophisticated dark matter search.
Superconducting wires are able to transmit the same amount of electrical current as a wider copper wire and produce a stronger magnetic field.
A team of researchers has created a 2D, open-source flood inundation model designed for a multiarchitecture computing system.
The successful assembly was the result of a collaboration among three institutions in three countries.
Learning how methanol binds to copper could lead to better catalysts for hydrogen production—and beyond.
Researchers discover they contain a phase of quantum matter, known as charge density waves, that’s common in other unconventional superconductors.
At Columbia University, Haim Waisman has developed computational models that describe how materials fracture.
Projects focus on broadening the diversity of the nuclear physics research community
Pete Bosler will develop algorithms that will intelligently choose which experience-based models are most appropriate to capture unresolved processes.