Advanced Science News celebrates the 138th birthday of Nobel Laureate Sir Alexander Fleming.
Advanced Science News celebrates the 138th birthday of Nobel Laureate Sir Alexander Fleming.
A one-dimensional mathematical model describes what causes wine to cry at the APS March meeting in Boston.
EOS and Gravity want to revolutionize human transport with a pioneering flight suit.
A key reason is that the unique complexity of the Earth system, and the unprecedentedness of likely climate change over the next century, mean the economic value of future climate damage cannot be estimated by normal scientific methods.
On August 11, NASA’s Parker Solar Probe took off to travel closer to the Sun, deeper into the solar atmosphere, than any mission before it.
The fabrication of microhelices with semi-hard-magnetic characteristics using template-assisted electroforming is reported.
The size, shape, and order of nanorods in solid-state microbial sensors are controlled using the forces of gravity and magnetism.
Artificial photochemically-active microswimmers, with 2D or 3D swimming behavior, can also swim against gravity.
Science fact catches up with science fiction: by exploiting magnetic levitation, biomanufacturing – creating living 3D structures – is now possible in zero gravity. Utkan Demirci discusses how this works.
Exploiting electrochemistry to gain control over the interactions of liquid metal droplets enables reversible switching for soft circuitry.