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  2. Aerogel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aerogel

    Aerogels made of cadmium selenide quantum dots in a porous 3-D network have been developed for use in the semiconductor industry. [73] Aerogel performance may be augmented for a specific application by the addition of dopants, reinforcing structures, and hybridizing compounds. For example, Spaceloft is a composite of aerogel with some kind of ...

  3. Sample-return mission - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sample-return_mission

    A particle captured in aerogel. Aerogel is a silica-based porous solid with a sponge-like structure, 99.8% of whose volume is empty space. Aerogel has about 1/1000 of the density of glass. An aerogel was used in the Stardust spacecraft because the dust particles the spacecraft was to collect would have an impact speed of about 6 km/s. A ...

  4. Steven Kistler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steven_Kistler

    Either way, in 1931 Kistler published a paper in Nature (vol. 127, p. 741) titled "Coherent Expanded Aerogels and Jellies". He left his teaching post at the University of Illinois in 1935 and signed a contract with Monsanto Company in the early 1940s to start developing granular silica aerogel products under the trademark Santocel. Largely used ...

  5. Aerographene - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aerographene

    Similarly, the compressive strength that describes the yield stress before plastic deformation under compression in graphene aerogels follows a power-law distribution: σ y /E s = (ρ/ρ s) n, where σ y is the compressive strength, ρ is the density of the graphene aerogel, E s is the modulus of graphene, ρ s is the density of graphene, and n ...

  6. This creates a nanofoam, a foam with most of its bubbles under 100 nanometres in size, giving the aerogel its unusual properties: Silica aerogel is the lowest-density solid yet created, actually lighter than air when in a vacuum (outside of a vacuum, air fills the pores, upping its density to slightly greater than air). It is also the best ...

  7. An unusual object has been releasing pulses of radio waves in ...

    www.aol.com/news/unusual-object-releasing-pulses...

    Other ground and space-based telescopes were used for follow-up observations of the newly discovered object, including the MeerKAT radio telescope in South Africa and the XMM-Newton space ...

  8. How did Topeka students get to interview astronauts currently in space? Whitson Elementary School English as a Second Language teacher Barbra Wright is an FAA-certified pilot and mentor for the ...

  9. Gerard K. O'Neill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerard_K._O'Neill

    After graduating from Cornell, O'Neill accepted a position as an instructor at Princeton University. [7] There he started his research into high-energy particle physics.In 1956, his second year of teaching, he published a two-page article that theorized that the particles produced by a particle accelerator could be stored for a few seconds in a storage ring. [1]