Scientists have observed so-called 'roaming' chemical reactions, those that at certain points move away from the lowest ...
Venus likely started off with the same amount of water as Earth, but today the hellish world has 100,000 times less water than its sister planet.
The chemical industry has been using a reaction with explosive chemicals for over 100 years — now Mülheim scientists have ...
The team believes that their approach can be extended to other important chemical reactions, offering new opportunities for ...
Chemical reactions make new chemicals. Atoms are rearranged during a chemical reaction, but the number of atoms does not change. Evidence of chemical reactions includes a large temperature change ...
In the ever-evolving landscape of chemical synthesis, innovation is the cornerstone of progress. Among the myriad of tools ...
Chemists often develop and optimize new chemical reactions using so-called model systems, i.e., simple, easily accessible substrates. They then use up to around 100 other substrates as examples to ...
To better understand how quantum information is scrambled in chemical reactions, the scientists borrowed a mathematical tool typically used in black hole physics known as out-of-time-order ...
As a greenhouse gas, carbon dioxide (CO2) contributes to climate change as it accumulates in the atmosphere. One way to reduce the amount of unwanted CO2 in the atmosphere is to convert the gas into a ...
The 2 nd Annual STEM Street Fair, Friday, May 3 at Vale High School offered up a little bit of everything along the science spectrum. The fair, spearheaded by Vale High School Chemistry and Physical ...
Chemists show that a machine-based method prevents widespread 'bias' in chemical publications. Chemists often develop and optimise new chemical reactions using so-called model systems, i.e. simple ...
they have shown that quantum information scrambling takes place in chemical reactions and can nearly reach the same quantum mechanical limit as it does in black holes. The work is published online ...