CHEMISTRY
現在、CHEMISTRYとして全国ホールツアー2024「BEGINS」でツアー中の堂珍嘉邦。ソロカレ...
MusicVoice
CHEMISTRYが、2月17日21時〜BSプレミアム4Kで先行放送される音楽番組「The Cove...
MusicVoice
By TV LIFE 3月17日(日)放送の『The Covers』 (NHK BS ※101チャン...
TV LIFE web
稀代の音楽プロデューサーであり伝説のA&Rである吉田敬。近くでそのA&Rとしての姿を見ていた黒岩利之...
Real Sound ブック
Plants can do astonishing things. As if the wonders of photosynthesis aren’t enough - producing oxygen from the sun to enable virtually all life on Earth - people have collaborated with plants on some mind-blowing projects. Scientists have taught spinach to send emails; generated electricity from shrubs; and discovered how they teach their offspring to adapt to climate change. But some of the things humans are doing to plants are also limiting their powers, a new study on tomatoes shows. Researchers at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign have investigated what happens when tomatoes are...
Euronews (English)
Up until recently, the biggest tea-based fracas between the UK and the US was the 1773 Boston Tea Party, which saw a bunch of patriots hurl entire shipments of tea overboard to protest against the British-enforced tax on the treasured infusion. Now, there’s a whole new storm brewing... And it’s hard for some to take this rapidly escalating diplomatic row with a pinch of salt. “Or is it?” as one US scientist may wonder. Professor Michelle Francl, of Bryn Mawr College in Pennsylvania, got the par-tea started by claiming that she found the secret behind making the perfect cup of tea, going so far...
Euronews (English)
Scientists in the US have found a way to destroy cancer cells by stimulating molecules with near-infrared light and causing them to vibrate. The researchers found that the method was 99 per cent effective against lab cultures of human melanoma cells. Their method involves getting a small dye molecule used in medical imaging to vibrate by stimulating it with near-infrared light. This woman’s bowel cancer disappeared after taking new drug for 6 monthsIt forms something called a plasmon, which is the rapid oscillation of electrons in the molecule back and forth similar to the waves in the sea. Th...
Euronews (English)
堂珍嘉邦(CHEMISTRY)が、ソロ活動11周年スタートとして開催したバースデーライブ『堂珍嘉邦 ...
MusicVoice
Washington (AFP) - This year's Nobel Chemistry winners are pioneers in the nanoworld. During the 1980s, Alexi Ekimov, 78, and Louis Brus, 80, working independently and on opposite sides of the Iron Curtain, succeeding in creating "quantum dots" -- nanoparticles that are found today in next generation TV screens and are being used to illuminate tumors in the body. A decade later, 62-year-old Moungi Bawendi revolutionized methods to manufacture them with precision and at scale, paving the way for their applications. Here's the rundown on the 2023 Nobel Prize in Chemistry winners. PerseveranceBa...
AFP
Washington (AFP) - Talk about bouncing back. MIT professor Moungi Bawendi is a co-winner of this year's Nobel chemistry prize for helping develop "quantum dots" -- nanoparticles that are now found in next generation TV screens and help illuminate tumors within the body. But as an undergraduate, he flunked his very first chemistry exam, recalling that the experience nearly "destroyed" him. The 62-year-old of Tunisian and French heritage excelled at science throughout high school, without ever having to break a sweat. But when he arrived at Harvard University as an undergraduate in the late 197...
AFP
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