Wireless Electricity?
Using a new wireless charging system, plug-in electric cars may be able to shed their power cables entirely.
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Using a new wireless charging system, plug-in electric cars may be able to shed their power cables entirely.
Developing clean energy technologies makes sense not only environmentally but economically, Nobelist Steven Chu argues.
Are workers at U.S. nuclear power plants prepared to deal with earthquakes, tsunamis, and other disasters?
Nanomaterials are used in consumer goods from cell phones to sunscreen. But how safe are they?
Hear from Greg Hall, the drilling expert whose team reached 33 Chilean miners trapped more than 2,000 feet underground.
Hear how synthetic diamonds might pave the way for the electronics of the future.
In your own tongue, you can easily recognize and transcribe spoken language, but for a computer it's a formidable task.
In this audio interview, structural engineer Michael Todd describes the state of bridge monitoring around the world.
Can you imagine a car that calls 911 on its own? Amory Lovins can.
The lead investigator for the U.S. team that studied the Twin Towers' collapse puts the lie to conspiracy theories.
The structural engineer of New York's lost Twin Towers discusses Shanghai's soaring World Financial Center.
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