Safe nuclear waste storage, new ways of generating and storing hydrogen, and technologies for capturing and reusing greenhouse gases are all potential spinoffs of a new study by University of Guelph researchers.
articles
City Researcher Harnesses Formula 1 Technology for the Construction of “Needle-Like” Skyscrapers
Recent research demonstrates that lightweight and compact inerters, similar to those developed for the suspension systems of Formula 1 cars, can reduce the required weight of tuned mass dampers by up to 70 percent, harvest energy from wind-induced oscillations, and lessen carbonemissions by using fewer construction materials.
Wetlands, Crops Can Mitigate Storm Damage to Coastal Cities
Changing land cover and use affect hurricanes, according to new research by UAH
Barrels of Ancient Antarctic Air Aim to Track History of Rare Gas
Ancient air samples from one of Antarctica’s snowiest ice core sites may add a new molecule to the record of changes to Earth’s atmosphere over the past century and a half, since the Industrial Revolution began burning fossil fuels on a massive scale.
Illinois Study Proposes Circular Phosphorus Economy for Midwest
Struvite could be part of a circular phosphorus economy.
Caribou Migration Linked to Climate Cycles and Insect Pests
In the largest-ever caribou study a University of Maryland-led team disputes long-held assumptions about migration timing and suggests warming summers may negatively affect calving.