PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Miniscule wave machine opens big scientific doors

2025-10-23
(Press-News.org) University of Queensland researchers have made a microscopic ‘ocean’ on a silicon chip to miniaturise the study of wave dynamics.

The device, made at UQ’s School of Mathematics and Physics, uses a layer of superfluid helium only a few millionths of a millimetre thick on a chip smaller than a grain of rice.

Dr Christopher Baker said it was the world’s smallest wave tank, with the quantum properties of superfluid helium allowing it to flow without resistance, unlike classical fluids such as water, which become immobilised by viscosity at such small scales.

“The study of how fluids move has fascinated scientists for centuries because hydrodynamics governs everything from ocean waves and the swirl of hurricanes to the flow of blood and air through our bodies,” Dr Baker said.

“But a lot of the physics behind waves and turbulence has been a mystery.

“Using laser light to both drive and measure the waves in our system, we have observed a range of striking phenomena.

“We saw waves that leant backward instead of forwards, shock fronts, and solitary waves known as solitons which travelled as depressions rather than peaks.

“This exotic behaviour has been predicted in theory but never seen before.”

Professor Warwick Bowen said the chip-scale approach in the Queensland Quantum Optics Laboratory could compress the duration of experiments by a million-fold, reducing days of data collection to milliseconds.

“In traditional laboratories, scientists use enormous wave flumes up to hundreds of metres long to study shallow-water dynamics such as tsunamis and rogue waves,” Professor Bowen said.  

“But these facilities only reach a fraction of the complexity of waves found in nature.

“Turbulence and nonlinear wave motion shape the weather, climate, and even the efficiency of clean-energy technologies like wind farms.

“Our miniature device amplifies the nonlinearities that drive these complex behaviours by more than 100,000 times.

“Being able to study these effects at chip scale – with quantum-level precision – could transform how we understand and model them.”

Professor Bowen said the UQ development opens a path to programmable hydrodynamics.

“Because the geometry and optical fields in this system are manufactured using the same techniques as those used for semiconductor chips, we can engineer the fluid’s effective gravity, dispersion, and nonlinearity with extraordinary precision,” he said.

“Future experiments could use the technology to discover new laws of fluid dynamics and accelerate the design of technologies ranging from turbines to ship hulls.

“Experiments on this tiny platform will improve our ability to predict the weather, explore energy cascades and even quantum vortex dynamics – questions central to both classical and quantum fluid mechanics.”

The research is published in Science.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Sanger Institute: Origins of the ‘London Underground mosquito’ uncovered, shedding light on West Nile virus transmission

2025-10-23
Embargoed: 23 October 19:00 UK / 14:00 US Eastern Times Peer-reviewed / Experimental / Mosquito genomics ORIGINS OF THE ‘LONDON UNDERGROUND MOSQUITO’ UNCOVERED, SHEDDING LIGHT ON WEST NILE VIRUS TRANSMISSION Subtitle for website: International researchers disprove theory about the evolution of urban mosquito species. New research has uncovered the ancient origins of an urban mosquito species, Culex pipiens form molestus, also known as the ‘London Underground mosquito’ – disproving a long-held theory of when it first evolved. Published today (23 October) in Science, ...

Global study reveals tempo of invasive species‘ impacts

2025-10-23
Biological invasions occur when non-native or exotic species colonize new geographic regions, often to the detriment of local plants and animals. Today, human action contributes significantly to invasion processes, allowing species to bridge vast distances and enter new habitats at a highly accelerated rate. This makes it increasingly important to better understand the impact of invasions on ecosystems. Researchers from the University of Bern, the University of Konstanz (Germany) and the Northeast Forestry University (China), have now shown how the ...

Study uncovers origins of urban human-biting mosquito, sheds light on uptick in West Nile virus spillover from birds to humans

2025-10-23
Evolutionary biologists have long believed that the human-biting mosquito, Culex pipiens form molestus,evolved from the bird-biting form, Culex pipiens form pipiens, in subways and cellars in northern Europe over the past 200 years. It’s been held up as an example of a species’ ability to rapidly adapt to new environments and urbanization. Now, a new study led by Princeton University researchers disproves that theory, tracing the origins of the molestus mosquito to more than 1,000 years ago in the Mediterranean or Middle East. The paper publishes October 23 in the journal Science. “This ...

It’s not the pain, it’s the mindset: How attitude outweighs pain

2025-10-23
Pain resilience is the key factor linking chronic pain to physical activity levels  Individuals’ ability to stay active despite pain depends more on their pain resilience than on how much pain they feel   Efforts should centre on building resilience to pain, as well as reducing it  Pain affects activity levels, but how individuals understand and act in the face of pain can make a difference, a new study from the University of Portsmouth has found.    The paper, published ...

Researchers find certain ecological experiments may be too human-centric

2025-10-23
Do insectivorous animals perceive green, caterpillar-shaped clay as a tasty meal? Ecologists sometimes use plasticine models mimicking natural prey, such as caterpillars, fruit, bird eggs, snakes, and frogs, to record attack marks. This method is widely adopted for its low cost and simplicity. The goal is to estimate biotic interactions, particularly predation. Yet a critical question remains: Is the assumption that plasticine caterpillars appear "tasty" to animals overly human-centric? Despite the method's popularity, it relies on an unproven premise that animals visually recognize and react to the models as if they were ...

Gender equality universally linked to physical capacity

2025-10-23
Fitness amongst young adults varies widely from one country to another, and is strongly associated with both socioeconomic development and gender equality, a new study from Karolinska Institutet published in the Journal of Sport and Health Science reports. The results indicate that levels of development and gender equality in a society can affect differences in physical capacity and therefore public health in general. Cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF) is an important factor of health and life-expectancy. For this present study, researchers systematically reviewed data from 95 studies ...

UC Irvine astronomers discover nearby exoplanet in habitable zone

2025-10-23
Irvine, Calif., Oct. 23, 2025 — University of California, Irvine astronomers have identified an exoplanet located in a star’s habitable zone, where surface conditions might exist that can support the presence of liquid water – an essential ingredient for all known life. The exoplanet, which exists in a region of the Milky Way Galaxy that is relatively close to our solar system, may have a rocky composition like Earth and is several times more massive, making it a “super-Earth.” The UC Irvine researchers and colleagues discuss their characterization of the exoplanet in a paper published today in The Astronomical Journal. "We have found so many exoplanets at ...

New way to destroy a cancer-linked molecule revealed

2025-10-23
Researchers have created a new type of drug molecule that can precisely destroy TERRA, an RNA molecule that helps certain cancer cells survive. Using advanced “RIBOTAC” technology, their compound finds TERRA inside cells and breaks it down without harming healthy molecules. This discovery could pave the way for a new generation of RNA-based cancer treatments, targeting the disease at its genetic roots rather than just its symptoms.   Scientists at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem have developed a new kind of drug ...

Highly manipulated heterostructure via additive manufacturing

2025-10-23
Titanium (Ti) is a promising metal for biomedical implant applications owing to lightweight, superior corrosion resistance and biocompatibility. Unfortunately, Ti is besieged by poor wear resistance owing to inferior plastic shear-resistance and strain-hardening capacity, thus causing premature failure upon joint friction. And conventional strengthening methods inevitably compromise the inherent biocompatibility and safety of pure titanium, which poses a sizable challenge in the manufacturing of wear-resistant Ti orthopedic implants. As described by the Archard law, wear resistance ...

Robots that flex like US: The rise of muscle-powered machines

2025-10-23
Forget gears and motors. The next generation of robots may run on living muscle. Scientists are now fusing biological tissue with engineered structures to create "biohybrid robots"—machines that flex, contract, and move using the same power source we do: cells. The potential could be striking. Imagine tiny robots swimming through your bloodstream to deliver drugs, engineered tissues that help heal damaged organs, or living systems that model diseases more faithfully than any computer. But so far, most of these robots are fragile lab prototypes, more science experiment than practical tool. A new review in the International Journal of Extreme Manufacturing maps out how to get ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

One of world’s most detailed virtual brain simulations is changing how we study the brain

How early morning practices affect college athletes’ sleep

Expanded effort will help standardize, improve care for hypertrophic cardiomyopathy

World COPD Day: November 19, 2025

Study shows people support higher taxes after understanding benefits of public goods

Nearly 47 million Americans are at high risk of potential health hazards from fossil fuel infrastructure

In mice, fertility treatments linked to higher mutations than natural conception

Researchers develop first-ever common language for cannabis, hemp aromas

Learning to see after being born blind

Chronic pain may increase the risk of high blood pressure in adults

Reviving exhausted immune cells boosts tumor elimination

Can we tap the ocean’s power to capture carbon?

Brain stimulation improves vision recovery after stroke

Species in crisis: critically endangered penguins are directly competing with fishing boats

Researchers link extreme heat and work disability among older, marginalized workers

Physician responses to patient expectations affect their income

Fertility preservation for patients with cancer

We should talk more at school: Researchers call for more conversation-rich learning as AI spreads

LHAASO uncovers mystery of cosmic ray "knee" formation

The simulated Milky Way: 100 billion stars using 7 million CPU cores

Brain waves’ analog organization of cortex enables cognition and consciousness, MIT professor proposes at SfN

Low-glutamate diet linked to brain changes and migraine relief in veterans with Gulf War Illness

AMP 2025 press materials available

New genetic test targets elusive cause of rare movement disorder

A fast and high-precision satellite-ground synchronization technology in satellite beam hopping communication

What can polymers teach us about curing Alzheimer's disease?

Lead-free alternative discovered for essential electronics component

BioCompNet: a deep learning workflow enabling automated body composition analysis toward precision management of cardiometabolic disorders

Skin cancer cluster found in 15 Pennsylvania counties with or near farmland

For platforms using gig workers, bonuses can be a double-edged sword

[Press-News.org] Miniscule wave machine opens big scientific doors