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In the Media

Displaying 15 news clips on page 861

Los Angeles Times

“The pressure goes down, the temperature goes down, it gets cooler, the relative humidity goes up -- and at some point, that cloud forms.”

Boston Globe

“It’s not the natural behavior of these organisms to produce tons and tons of drugs”

Wall Street Journal

“The amount of digital data is overwhelming by any historical standard”

CBS

"By observing this planet with Spitzer and Kepler for more than three years, we were able to produce a very low-resolution 'map' of this giant, gaseous planet"

The Guardian

"We call it 'slow light'." Instead of hurtling through the vacuum at 300 million metres per second, the light slows down in the cold cloud of atoms to around 100 or 1,000 metres per second."

Boston Globe

“One wonderful thing about not having expectations for yourself . . . is that everything that happens is just such a surprise.”

Wired

"The main advantage of these sensors is their common use in mobile phones"

Fast Company

“What we tried to do is sort of stand back and say what’s changed”

The Guardian

"While science is not quite at the stage where it can erase memories of our ex-partners, the story did make me wonder how I would respond if faced with a pill or a procedure that could make the memory of the bad thing that happened go away for ever. "

HuffPost

What do a 60-year-old video artist, a 36-year-old atomic physicist, and a 53-year-old behavioral economist have in common?

Scientific American

"The goal of the U.S. Clean Energy Education & Empowerment (C3E) program is to advance the careers and leadership of professional women in the field of clean energy."

Wall Street Journal

Companies are grappling with increasingly far flung networks of suppliers and manufacturers. At the same time, many companies have reduced the number of backup suppliers, in order to cut costs.

CBS

"If a company has invested over $200 million in a satellite, they need to be able to assure that it works for that period of time. We really need to improve our method of quantifying and understanding the space environment, so we can better improve design."

Nature

“We’re seeing graphene getting to a point where it can compete with today’s technologies”

Bloomberg

“Ever since the sequencing of the human genome, there has been a sense that the science hasn’t panned out quite as quickly as people had hoped”