The STEAM Olympics comprised 10 activities that spanned art workshops, essay writing, science and math tests, 3D printing workshops and a science fair.
1d
Tech Xplore on MSNSystem delivers early prediction of wind turbine failureA researcher from VUB has developed a system that can predict wind turbine failures caused by early component malfunctions.
Many of today's everyday items are destined to become fossils after millions of years, but scientists have suggested that ...
4d
ZME Science on MSNThis Company is Recycling Wind Turbines Into Surfboards and They Actually WorkThe collaboration between Kerr’s surfboard company, Draft Surf, and ACCIONA, a global leader in renewable energy and infrastructure, has resulted in the world’s first surfboards made from retired wind ...
11d
ZME Science on MSNNew Recycling Hack Turns Retired Wind Turbines Into Asphalt You Can Drive OnThere are also efforts to make future wind turbine blades easier to recycle from the get-go. Researchers are working on epoxy ...
8d
Amazon S3 on MSNWind Energy Revolution: 200,000-Watt Turbine in New EnglandResidents of Block Island, Rhode Island, are harnessing steady ocean breezes through a 200,000-watt wind turbine generator to power their homes, marking a significant shift from diesel generators to ...
Residents in the south-west Victorian town of Nelson say building the some of the biggest wind turbines in Australia will ...
Now consider how big the problem could be across Europe and China, which have the world's largest wind turbines. The largest turbine we know of, a 26-MW-generating behemoth set to be completed in ...
A company's plan to build wind turbines that would be equal in height to the country's biggest is attracting resistance from residents in south-west Victoria. Residents are concerned about their ...
Good Good Good on MSN9d
Decommissioned wind turbine blades recycled into first-of-its-kind surfboardThe surfboard prototype is created from a decommissioned blade from the company’s Waubra wind farm in Victoria, Australia. It ...
Researchers in China have developed a process that turns retired wind turbine blades into a valuable road-building resource. Their technique, which combines physical crushing with chemical ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results