Researchers have discovered microplastics and nanoplastics in the human brain, reproductive organs, and other vital systems.
News-Medical.Net on MSN
Mathematical models explain food movement and churning in the digestive tract
Synchronization abounds in nature: from the flashing lights of fireflies to the movement of fish wriggling through the ocean, ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Scientists 3D print muscle tissue in zero gravity to study diseases beyond Earth
ETH Zurich scientists 3D print muscle tissue in simulated zero gravity, paving the way for growing human tissue in space.
ByteDance launches Seed3D 1.0, a generative AI model that creates simulation-grade 3D models from a single image using Diffusion Transformer architecture.
The hazards associated with microplastic pollution are becoming increasingly recognized. However, one study suggests that researchers have misjudged the impacts of nanoplastics — the insidiously ...
Human health is the Achilles heel of space travel. Researchers at ETH Zurich have now succeeded in printing complex muscle ...
As chronic liver disease becomes more widespread, researchers at Science Tokyo have developed a lab-grown organoid that ...
3D screens have really struggled to take off. Neither bulky 3D televisions that require cheap-looking glasses nor VR headsets have ever caught on in the mainstream. Movies projected in 3D have ...
The concept of a 3D scanner can seem rather simple in theory: simply point a camera at the physical object you wish to scan in, rotate around the object to capture all angles and stitch it together ...
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