Interesting Engineering on MSN
New ‘necroprinting’ uses mosquito feeding tubes for 3D printing below cell scale
A new manufacturing technique called "3D necroprinting" repurposes mosquito proboscises as biodegradable nozzles for 3D ...
Researchers repurpose a mosquito’s proboscis for 3D necroprinting, offering a lower-cost and biodegradable alternative to ...
Prof Brennan uses a surgical drill to remove a flap of skull. The exposed brain is pink, flushed with blood, and gently ...
Strictly Come Dancing star Dr Punam Krishan has revealed she is battling breast cancer as she shared 'shock' diagnosis on ...
There is a shadow disease that often lurks unnoticed, growing quietly within a man’s body which is hidden behind the mundane routine of daily life, masked by ag ...
MIT researchers tested the “Spatial Computing” theory and found that brain waves organize neurons into flexible, ...
A novel electrode platform detects dopamine from single living brain organoids in real time, enabling non-destructive ...
Davina McCall and her husband Michael Douglas have admitted they can't wait for 2025 to end after enduring a 'hell of a year' ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Scientists grew human tear glands to crack a painful mystery
Tears seem simple, but the tiny glands that produce them are among the least understood organs in the human body. By growing miniature human tear glands in the lab and coaxing them to “cry,” ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Bacteria-size robots now run for months, and you can program them
Bacteria-scale robots that can run for months without human control are no longer a lab fantasy. Researchers have now built ...
Encapsulated microbubbles (EMBs), tiny gas-filled bubbles coated in lipid or protein shells, play a central role in ...
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