Charged Up: This GE Tech Is Engineered To Speed Up Energy Transition
Last year, GE made a commitment to becoming carbon-neutral in its own operations by 2030.
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Laser pincers that could fetch antimatter, a squishy insulator that can shapeshift into a conductor, and a 3D map of a tiny chunk of a mouse’s brain that could help make AI smarter.
View ArticlePuppy Love: Spanish Vets Are Using Innovative MRI Techniques To Unravel The...
Canine epilepsy might be a fairly common neurological affliction, affecting around 1 in every 25 dogs,[1] but its effects are distressing for both the pet and its owner.
View ArticleWhen The Wind Doesn’t Blow: How Upgraded Gas Turbines Can Help Bring More...
Like many countries, the U.K. is increasingly relying on renewables for electricity.
View ArticleEnergize This: Canada Could Become A Global Hub For New Nuclear Technology
Canada, like many industrialized countries, has pledged to reduce its net carbon emissions to zero by 2050. But what makes Canada unique is how it wants to achieve that goal.
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A centuries-old light experiment could lead to an Earth-sized telescope, a futuristic robot that’s built to run and a car that can fly.
View ArticleHA Hits a New High: Record-Breaking Turbines Push Past 1 Million Operating Hours
Malaysia is not unlike other nations in Southeast Asia. Its population has tripled since 1970 and stands at 33 million today, while its GDP has grown nearly a hundredfold in that time.
View ArticleA Look Back In Time: How Imaging Technology Helped Crack 6 Historical Mysteries
In 1895, when Wilhelm Roentgen trained his cathode ray on his wife’s hand and took what may have been the world’s first human X-ray, she cried out, “I have seen my death!” — or so the story goes.
View ArticleThe 5 Coolest Things On Earth This Week
Echoing Albert Einstein, scientists are creating matter from energy, building bridges from carbon and making vaccines from plants. This week’s coolest things turn over a whole new leaf.
View ArticleLeveling Up: Legendary Children’s Hospital In Cambodia Is Now Using MRI For...
Children’s access to good healthcare used to be a major concern in Cambodia.
View ArticleGlimpse Of The Future: COVID Sped Up Telehealth's Revolution. GE, With AWS'...
A new collaboration is the latest sign that healthcare centers may no longer be constrained by their physical walls.
View ArticleFuture Of Flight: These GE Engineers Are Finding Ways To Reduce Carbon Emissions
The transition to cleaner sources of energy is one place where GE is helping decarbonize the world and address climate change. Another area involves aviation.
View ArticleSun, Sand And Water: Solar-Powered Desalination Plant Will Help Supply Saudi...
“Water, water, everywhere, nor any drop to drink,” lamented a thirsty sailor in Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s epic 18th-century poem “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner.” Fortunately,
View ArticleThe Road To A Greener World: GE Renewable Energy Chief Talks About The Energy...
COVID-19 has altered the world, but it hasn’t stopped the steady march of renewable energy. In fact, during the pandemic the segment grew faster than in the past.
View ArticleRough Rider: This Risk-Aware Robot Could Help The U.S. Army Tackle Off-Road...
A curious creature crawls steadily through the underbrush in a remote forest.
View ArticleThe 5 Coolest Things On Earth This Week
Tiny 3D-printed catalysts could help keep hypersonic aircraft from overheating, “tumor avatars” could help doctors treat cancer, and a touch screen without the screen.
View ArticleBreaking The Mold: 3D Printing Could Help The Wind Industry Forge A New Path
For hundreds of years, the art of casting industrial components has hardly changed: Design an object, create a model, use the model to build a mold and then cast your final p
View ArticleGhost In The Machine: Edison Lost Currents War But Won A Bigger Prize That...
The World’s Columbian Exposition of 1893 gave Chicago the nickname “White City” for the classical white buildings bathed, at night, by the bright glow of some 100,000 electrical lamps installed at
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