Ampera, a Palm Beach Gardens startup, is developing shipping container-sized nuclear reactors using thorium for clean energy.
Nevada's largest utility company says it may not meet its 2030 clean energy goals due to the demands from data centers.
AMPERA is developing thorium-fueled microreactors designed to fit in shipping containers and power data centers, ships, and ...
From combat exoskeletons to 'smart' bullets and invisibility cloaks, futuristic technology that could transform the ...
The world-first facility for permanently disposing spent nuclear fuel is set to begin operations in Finland after decades of ...
Excess charring on Artemis I's heat shield had NASA racing to understand what went wrong—and to ensure the technology was ...
Readying California for offshore wind power will require a perfect concert of major port upgrades, hundreds of miles of new ...
Avalanche Energy is working on an DARPA project to build a new class of materials capable of turning damaging radiation into ...
Searching for alien languages sheds light on how much human languages have in common—with each other and even with animal ...
Early desalination plants in the Middle East were the first type, burning fossil fuels to evaporate water, leaving the salt ...
Meeting the Rising Thermal Challenges of AI, EV, and Energy Storage Systems,how Liquid Cooling Is Becoming Critical in ...
ALBANY, N.Y. (NEXSTAR) — Labor leaders and a bipartisan crew of state lawmakers want $200 million in the upcoming state budget to build shared heating and cooling systems called thermal energy ...