by Kathi Leiden | Mar 21, 2017 | Helium Science, Helium Uses
Researchers from Curtin University in Australia have found a way to use helium dating to track where diamonds are trapped in underground rock. Finding the source of the Aussie diamonds In Australia, teams of treasure hunters have long searched for the...
by Kathi Leiden | Mar 10, 2017 | Helium Science
You read that right. IBM scientists have managed to store one bit of data on a single atom. And they needed supercooled helium to do it. The smallest magnet on earth is invisible On Wednesday, IBM issued a press release and video, announcing that they had...
by Kathi Leiden | Feb 28, 2017 | Helium, Helium Safety
Cost is always crucial when choosing a helium supplier, but there’s much more to it. Will you get what you paid for, or will you be left deflated? For the most part, price is the number one thing you are going to be concerned with when choosing a new helium...
by Kathi Leiden | Feb 11, 2017 | Helium, Helium News
This is the year for Moon Express, who just received another round of funding to pursue their goal of mining helium-3 from the moon. A newer, quieter space race Two years ago, we told you about a new race to get back to the moon to search for deposits of helium-3: A...
by Kathi Leiden | Feb 9, 2017 | Helium News, Helium Science
Helium has long been known to be a stable, noble gas. New research claims it may not be. If it’s true, the periodic table as we know it may be rewritten. Helium: A stable noble gas Since it was first discovered in 1868 in the halos of light surrounding the sun...