ZME Science on MSN
Scientists Say the Constant Motion of Living Cells Could Be a Hidden Source of Electrical Power
The constant, energy-driven motion inside living cells may generate electricity in a way no one fully recognized before.
Study Finds on MSN
Hidden Tunnels In Brain Cells May Explain Why Alzheimer’s Spreads
Study finds ultrathin tubes connecting brain cells that transport Alzheimer's proteins. The network changes months before plaques appear.
A team at Fraunhofer ISE has created new imaging methods to measure losses in individual sub-cells of multi-junction solar cells based on perovskite-silicon and perovskite-perovskite-silicon ...
Study Finds on MSN
Dad’s Microplastic Exposure May Prime Daughters For Insulin Resistance
Fathers exposed to microplastics before conception may be setting their daughters up for metabolic problems later in life.
The Brighterside of News on MSN
'Fart gas' linked to memory loss and Alzheimer’s-like brain damage, study finds
Researchers at Johns Hopkins Medicine, led by Bindu Paul, an associate professor of pharmacology, psychiatry and neuroscience ...
The Avid Outdoorsman on MSN
Digital tags aren’t the same as tagging — the Texas rule game wardens keep repeating
Texas has pushed hard into digital hunting tools, but game wardens keep stressing a simple point: a license on... The post ...
Rapid industrialization advancements have grabbed worldwide attention to integrate a very large number of electronic ...
Learn how pumpkin seeds can help men's prostate health, support fertility, and provide important nutrients. Find recipes and ...
When mail is digitized, it becomes sterile – no longer a precious handwritten card that smells like my gramma’s perfume.
New evidence of electrical power generation on cell membranes could offer insights into how living cells interact with their ...
The world has firmly crossed into the “Age of Electricity.” That is a unifying finding in the International Energy Agency’s ...
Morning Overview on MSN
'Necroprinting' uses mosquito tubes to 3D-print below cell scale
Engineers have turned one of nature’s most reviled body parts into a precision tool, using the hollow feeding tubes of dead ...
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