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News & Articles By Michael Alexander
04/02/2021
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By Michael Alexander
Modern bone healing: Scientists design device that helps accelerate bone regeneration
As many as 6.3 million cases of bone fracture are reported in the U.S. annually. While the body usually begins to repair itself within minutes of a fracture’s occurrence, that process can sometimes be impaired. This can result in debilitating injuries. As a way to address the latter, surgeons at the University of Michigan Medicine […]
03/29/2021
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By Michael Alexander
Save the whales: This new detection method can help researchers find and count stranded whales… from SPACE
Advancements in satellite imaging analysis may soon make it easier for scientists to detect, count and help stranded whales, a study has found. Scientists from the British Antarctic Survey (BAS), together with four Chilean research institutes, said the new image analysis and detection method, which involves the use of very high resolution (VHR) satellite images […]
03/17/2021
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By Michael Alexander
Researchers grow crops on NASA soil simulant, suggesting that the same can be done on Mars and the Moon
It may seem like something out of a science fiction novel, but growing food in space is one step closer to becoming a reality, a group of scientists has said. As reported in the journal Open Agriculture, researchers from Wageningen University and Research in the Netherlands have managed to identify vegetables and other crops that can […]
03/11/2021
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By Michael Alexander
Process called “advanced steam cracking” can turn plastic waste into high-quality plastics
The property that makes plastic such a pesky pollutant just might be the key that will help solve the problem of its negative impact on the environment. This is according to a research team from Chalmers University of Technology in Sweden, who had recently developed a more sustainable way of dealing with plastic waste: breaking […]
02/17/2021
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By Michael Alexander
Chemists develop a revolutionary material that self-assembles, with potential applications in health and electronics
Future technologies may soon be made from self-assembling materials, according to chemists from Trinity College Dublin. The team successfully created a new material that self-assembles into two-dimensional (2D) networks in a predictable and reproducible manner — a property that gives it the potential to be used in numerous applications. As noted by its creators in […]
01/14/2021
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By Michael Alexander
Borrowing from Nature: Scientists study fish movement to improve performance of underwater robots
In order to design more advanced robots, researchers from the Penn State Department of Mechanical Engineering are looking at one unlikely animal for inspiration: fish. “We essentially want to study locomotion in fluids, by learning how fish swim and then use that fundamental knowledge to optimize robotic swimming,” Bo Cheng, an assistant professor of mechanical […]
12/25/2020
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By Michael Alexander
Scientists crack mystery behind strong, resilient mollusk shells
Scientists have finally cracked the secret behind one of Nature’s strongest materials. Nacre, also known as mother-of-pearl, is the rainbow-sheened material that lines the insides of mussel and other mollusk shells. It is also widely considered to be one of the toughest substances in Nature, with scientists noting its hardness and resilience as being particularly impressive. […]
12/10/2020
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By Michael Alexander
New device will let ISS astronauts 3D print useful objects from their own plastic waste
Astronauts aboard the International Space Station (ISS) will soon have a way to minimize their plastic waste — by using it as raw material for tools and cutlery. This will be done with the help of a custom three-dimensional or 3D printer. Dubbed the “Recycler,” the machine is built by National Aeronautics and Space Administration […]
11/26/2020
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By Michael Alexander
Life on the Red Planet: Ex-NASA scientist claims the Viking missions found proof of alien life on Mars back in the 70s
Scientists may have actually discovered evidence of extraterrestrial life on Mars back in the 1970s. This is according to former National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) scientist Gilbert Levin, who, in a column for Scientific American, claimed that the Viking missions — specifically its Labeled Release (LR) life detection experiment — found evidence of life […]
11/17/2020
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By Michael Alexander
Scientists generate novel form of magnetism from graphene
A “eureka moment” is perhaps the best way to describe what a team of physicists from Stanford University went through after they discovered a property that, at first, only existed as a theory: orbital ferromagnetism. Orbital ferromagnetism is a form of magnetism caused by the lining up of the electrons’ orbital motions. According to the scientists […]
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