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 ...
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 ...
In a study published in Nature Communications, the team showed for the first time that specific frequencies of acoustic waves ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Sound-wave time crystal appears to defy Newton’s 3rd law in lab tests
Physicists at New York University have built a time crystal powered entirely by sound waves, and lab tests suggest the ...
Researchers have taken a novel approach to studying the interaction between certain topological metamaterials and sound wave propagation. The technique, described by IMDEA Materials' Dr. Johan ...
A quiet revolution is taking shape in the world of physics, and it doesn’t rely on exotic particles or massive particle colliders. Instead, it begins with something much more familiar—sound.
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 ...
Not everything needs to be seen to be believed; certain things are more readily heard, like a train approaching its station. In a recent paper, published in Physical Review Letters, researchers have ...
At the start of my career, I used to do acoustic testing in an anechoic chamber where sound is not reflected as it gets absorbed. But the quietness of these chambers always got me thinking of how ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results