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Released: 21-Nov-2014 5:20 PM EST
For Important Tumor-Suppressing Protein, Context Is Key
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Berkeley Lab scientists have learned new details about how an important tumor-suppressing protein, called p53, binds to the human genome. As with many things in life, they found that context makes a big difference.

Released: 26-Nov-2014 12:00 PM EST
Copper on the Brain at Rest
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

A new study by Berkeley Lab researchers has shown that proper copper levels are essential to the health of the brain at rest.

Released: 2-Dec-2014 1:00 PM EST
A Better Look at the Chemistry of Interfaces
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

SWAPPS - Standing Wave Ambient Pressure Photoelectron Spectroscopy – is a new X-ray technique developed at Berkeley Lab’s Advanced Light Source that provides sub-nanometer resolution of every chemical element to be found at heterogeneous interfaces, such as those in batteries, fuel cells and other devices.

Released: 8-Dec-2014 1:00 PM EST
World Record for Compact Particle Accelerator
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Using one of the most powerful lasers in the world, Berkeley Lab researchers have accelerated subatomic particles to the highest energies ever recorded. They used an emerging class of compact particle accelerator that physicists believe can shrink traditional, miles-long accelerators to machines that can fit on a table.

10-Dec-2014 6:00 PM EST
Air Pollution Down Thanks to California’s Regulation of Diesel Trucks
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Ever wonder what’s in the black cloud that emits from some semi trucks that you pass on the freeway? Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) scientist Thomas Kirchstetter knows very precisely what’s in there, having conducted detailed measurements of thousands of heavy-duty trucks over months at a time at two San Francisco Bay Area locations.

Released: 15-Dec-2014 5:00 PM EST
Back to Future with Roman Architectural Concrete
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

A key discovery to understanding Roman architectural concrete that has stood the test of time and the elements for nearly two thousand years has been made by researchers using beams of X-rays at Berkeley Lab’s Advanced Light Source.

Released: 17-Dec-2014 3:00 PM EST
Switching to Spintronics
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Berkeley Lab researchers used an electric field to reverse the magnetization direction in a multiferroic spintronic device at room temperature, a demonstration that points a new way towards spintronics and smaller, faster and cheaper methods of storing and processing data.

Released: 22-Dec-2014 12:00 PM EST
Piezoelectricity in a 2D Semiconductor
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

A door has been opened to low-power off/on switches in micro-electro-mechanical systems (MEMS) and nanoelectronic devices, as well as ultrasensitive bio-sensors, with the first observation of piezoelectricity in a free standing two-dimensional semiconductor by a team of researchers with Berkeley Lab.

8-Jan-2015 9:00 PM EST
From the Bottom Up: Manipulating Nanoribbons at the Molecular Level
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Researchers at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and the University of California, Berkeley, have developed a new precision approach for synthesizing graphene nanoribbons from pre-designed molecular building blocks. Using this process the researchers have built nanoribbons that have enhanced properties—such as position-dependent, tunable bandgaps—that are potentially very useful for next-generation electronic circuitry.

Released: 22-Jan-2015 12:00 PM EST
California’s Policies Can Significantly Cut Greenhouse Gas Emissions Through 2030
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

A new model of the impact of California’s existing and proposed policies on its greenhouse gas (GHG) reduction goals suggests that the state is on track to meet 2020 goals, and could achieve greater emission reductions by 2030, but the state will need to do more to reach its 2050 climate goals.


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