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Released: 4-Dec-2014 1:30 PM EST
Rattled Atoms Mimic High-Temperature Superconductivity
SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

An experiment at the Department of Energy’s SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory provided the first fleeting glimpse of the atomic structure of a material as it entered a state resembling room-temperature superconductivity – a long-sought phenomenon in which materials might conduct electricity with 100 percent efficiency under everyday conditions.

Released: 4-Dec-2014 3:15 PM EST
X-Ray Laser Reveals How Bacterial Protein Morphs in Response to Light
SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

Researchers have captured the highest-resolution snapshots ever taken with an X-ray laser that show changes in a protein’s structure over time, revealing how a key protein in a photosynthetic bacterium changes shape when hit by light. They achieved a resolution of 1.6 angstroms, equivalent to the radius of a single tin atom.

Released: 8-Dec-2014 3:30 PM EST
Study May Help Slow the Spread of Flu
SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

An important study conducted in part at the Department of Energy’s SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory may lead to new, more effective vaccines and medicines by revealing detailed information about how a flu antibody binds to a wide variety of flu viruses.

Released: 15-Dec-2014 6:20 PM EST
Is the Higgs Boson a Piece of the Matter-Antimatter Puzzle?
SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

Several experiments, including the BaBar experiment at the Department of Energy's SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, have helped explain some – but not all – of the imbalance between matter and antimatter in the universe. Now a SLAC theorist and his colleagues have laid out a possible method for determining if the Higgs boson is involved.

Released: 19-Dec-2014 1:00 PM EST
First Direct Evidence that a Mysterious Phase of Matter Competes with High-Temperature Superconductivity
SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

Scientists have found the first direct evidence that a mysterious phase of matter known as the "pseudogap" competes with high-temperature superconductivity, robbing it of electrons that otherwise might pair up to carry current through a material with 100 percent efficiency.

Released: 28-Jan-2015 3:00 PM EST
X-Ray Study Reveals Division of Labor in Cell Health Protein
SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

Researchers working in part at the Department of Energy’s SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory have discovered that a key protein for cell health, which has recently been linked to diabetes, cancer and other diseases, can multitask by having two identical protein parts divide labor.

Released: 4-Feb-2015 1:00 PM EST
Record Keeping Helps Bacteria’s Immune System Fight Invaders
SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

Bacteria have a sophisticated means of defending themselves, and they need it: more viruses infect bacteria than any other biological entity. Two experiments undertaken at the Department of Energy's SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory provide new insight at the heart of bacterial adaptive defenses in a system called CRISPR, short for Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeat.

9-Feb-2015 2:30 PM EST
Scientists Get First Glimpse of a Chemical Bond Being Born
SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

Scientists have used an X-ray laser at the Department of Energy’s SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory to get the first glimpse of the transition state where two atoms begin to form a weak bond on the way to becoming a molecule.

10-Feb-2015 1:40 PM EST
Scientists Take First X-ray Portraits of Living Bacteria at the LCLS
SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

Researchers working at the Department of Energy’s SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory have captured the first X-ray portraits of living bacteria. This milestone, reported in the Feb. 11 issue of Nature Communications, is a first step toward possible X-ray explorations of the molecular machinery at work in viral infections, cell division, photosynthesis and other processes that are important to biology, human health and our environment.

Released: 17-Feb-2015 2:30 PM EST
Study Could Pave the Way for Painkillers with Fewer Side Effects
SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

Researchers have long sought alternatives to morphine – a powerful and widely used painkiller – that curb its side effects, including dependency, nausea and dizziness. Now, an experiment at the Department of Energy’s SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory has supplied the most complete atomic-scale map of such a compound docked with a cellular receptor that regulates the body’s pain response and tolerance.


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