NBIC Science in the News

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NBIC Science in the News Innovative science from the NBIC is often reported widely in the popular science and medical newsletters along with energy and environmental blogs. John Schotland’s group paper on phaseless 3-D imaging from Physical Review Letters (2009) was reported to a wider scientific community by Nature Nanotechnology. The paper by Dawn Bonnell and her collaborators on plasmon induced electrical conduction in ASC Nano (2010) was covered by Discovery News, Popular Science and Popular Mechanics and numerous science blogs. This was also reported by AVS and MRS. News about fibrin elasticity and protein unfolding sparked interest beyond Dennis Discher and his colleague’s paper in Science (2009) and was reported in Science Blog, Medical News TODAY, e!Science, and many other medical newsletters. Rob Carpick and his collaborators reported in Nature Nanotechnology (2010) about the exceptional wear resistance in diamond-like carbon. Newsletters like W3 and Nano Werk reported its relevance to the future of nanolithography, nanometrology, nanomanufacturing., probe-based technologies

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NBIC Science in the News. Innovative science from the NBIC is often reported widely in the popular science and medical newsletters along with energy and environmental blogs. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of NBIC Science in the News

Page 1: NBIC Science in the News

NBIC Science in the NewsInnovative science from the NBIC is often reported widely in the popular science and medical newsletters along with energy and environmental blogs.

John Schotland’s group paper on phaseless 3-D imaging from Physical Review Letters (2009) was reported to a wider scientific community by Nature Nanotechnology.

The paper by Dawn Bonnell and her collaborators on plasmon induced electrical conduction in ASC Nano (2010) was covered by Discovery News, Popular Science and Popular Mechanics and numerous science blogs. This was also reported by AVS and MRS.

News about fibrin elasticity and protein unfolding sparked interest beyond Dennis Discher and his colleague’s paper in Science (2009) and was reported in Science Blog, Medical News TODAY, e!Science, and many other medical newsletters.

Rob Carpick and his collaborators reported in Nature Nanotechnology (2010) about the exceptional wear resistance in diamond-like carbon. Newsletters like W3 and Nano Werk reported its relevance to the future of nanolithography, nanometrology, nanomanufacturing., probe-based technologies