- Literature - 18:00
Queen Victoria's personal journals put online - Environmental Sciences - 16:30
Road2Science: Researching Stronger, Safer, Smarter Infrastructure - Physics - 16:30
Get ready for the transit of Venus! - Business - 16:00
Engineering a better society - Medicine - 13:00
Stopping drug- induced liver injury - Medicine - 12:02
Penn Offers Benefits- tax Offset to Same- sex Couples - Environmental Sciences - 12:02
Lighting control system at U-M saves energy and costs - Life Sciences - 12:02
UC San Diego Receives $7 Million from DOD for Innovative Neural Research - Social Sciences - 12:00
Better response plans needed for children exposed to domestic violence - Physics - 11:01
Exotic particles, chilled and trapped, form giant matter wave - Business - 11:00
Holidays inspire disadvantaged children to learn, says study - Life Sciences - 10:00
Think big, think seahorse - History - 10:00
Everything, everywhere, ever’ – a new door opens on the history of humanity - Life Sciences - 07:30
Wake up call for koala protection - Business - May 23
Supercomputing set to boost region’s competitiveness - Medicine - May 23
’How- to’ video tutorials could boost hearing aid use, say researchers
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Learn about thermoelectronics -- and more -- via ’Material Marvels’
In this latest segment of "Material Marvels," Yale scientist Ainissa Ramirez describes how simple devices like cell phones can be powered by heat using thermoelectric materials, which convert heat to electricity.
Check out the other videos in the "Material Marvels" series:
Nanomaterials
Find out how their strange properties can make future products a reality and might even help kill cancer cells.
Graphene
Discover how a layer of carbon that is one atom thick, called graphene (found in everyday pencils), will revolutionize our lives -- making. blazingly fast computers and video games a reality.
Quasicrystals
Learn about the properties of this stronger-than-steel material, discovered by a scientist who recently won the Nobel Prize in chemistry, years after his work was ridiculed.
Solar cells
Explore how the science behind solar materials made from "silicon sandwiches" could some day provide free, unlimited power.
Shape memory alloys
Hear what the Mars Rover, robots, and the braces in your mouth have in common.
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Full, Assoc, or Asst. Professor in Marketing - Life Sciences - 23.5
Open Rank Professor - Pathology & Lab Med







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