Scientists bioengineer a cellular speedometer0
- From Around the Web, Science & Technology
- May 14, 2019
An all-Princeton research team has identified bacteria that can detect the speed of flowing fluids.
An all-Princeton research team has identified bacteria that can detect the speed of flowing fluids.
Two interns are prototyping soft robots made using 3D printing and silicon.
A Native American man in Montana has what may be the oldest DNA native to the Americas, according to news reports.
Fictional crash tests the ways that disaster response and space agencies would deal with such a natural disaster
New method cuts through galaxies’ messy emissions, provides clearer window into dark matter, dark energy
Person re-identification entails the automated identification of the same person in multiple images from different cameras and with different backgrounds, angles or positions.
Researchers at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem (HU) have found a way to transform skin cells into the three major stem cell types that comprise early-stage embryos. The work (in mouse cells) has significant implications for modelling embryonic disease and placental dysfunctions, as well as paving the way to create whole embryos from skin cells.
Space experts from several agencies failed to stop an asteroid fragment from wiping out New York City last week.
A variation of the classic double-slit experiment is applied to a positron for the first time
An enormous ocean whirlpool the size of Colorado appears every spring off the coast of Somalia, and it’s so big, scientists can see it from space.