How thorium can burn nuclear waste and generate energy
An idea from Cambridge University for replacing uranium with thorium in conventional nuclear reactors.
An idea from Cambridge University for replacing uranium with thorium in conventional nuclear reactors.
A bunch of hot air starts to rise through a kilometer-high tower in Western Australia's outback, driving turbines day and night.
Get ready for the all new, electric powered, front-wheel drive Search Mobile.
And other tall tales from the lighting industry.
The world's largest oil and gas company says go atomic. Why?
If they can make everything from meat to jaw bones to Stradivarius violins, can't they replicate themselves? Question of the day.
DOE boss Ernest Moniz says high temperature models could power red hot processes like hydrogen and oil production. Steel, cement making, desalination too. Would replace fossil fuels. But China leads.
Sea life as we know it - fish, crustaceans, plankton, you name it - could be doomed if the pH level keeps sinking. Here's what can be done.
Rivalries aside, competitors in Google Solve for X nuclear bake-off agree to push Congress for broader fusion funding.
It's the latest modernization from Hangzhou-based car maker Geely, known for rescuing both Volvo and the U.K. company that makes the popular taxis. And it has more up its sleeve.