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Nala Rogers is a staff writer and editor at Inside Science, where she covers the Earth and Creature beats. She has a bachelor’s degree in biology from the University of Utah and a graduate certificate ...
(Inside Science) -- The coronavirus may be taking center stage lately, but there are still other viruses and bacteria that can cause major health complications. Pneumonia accounts for 1.5 million ...
The prize goes jointly to Takaaki Kajita of the University of Tokyo in Japan and Arthur B. McDonald of Queen's University in Kingston, Canada "for the discovery of neutrino oscillations, which shows ...
(Inside Science) -- Humanity's fascination with celestial objects in the night sky goes back thousands of years. The history of those objects goes back even further. This month, astronomers look back ...
Researchers from Purdue University drew inspiration from a spider’s web to develop a fractal design for 3D photodetectors used in biomedical imaging. The spooky but sturdy architecture was chosen for ...
(Inside Science) -- Without the agriculture of the Indigenous peoples of the Americas, the British wouldn’t have their fish and chips, Italians would be eating pizzas without tomato sauce, and the ...
(Inside Science) -- Lanternfish are known for the bioluminescent organs known as a photophores that guide them through the deep sea. In some species of this group of fish, the organs shine like ...
But even the high-tech e-skins have a downside: Many of them aren't sweat proof. A person wearing the e-skin might be able to get away with light sweating, as the sweat would vaporize quickly, but the ...
(Inside Science) -- "Watching paint dry" may be a term most people use to show how boring something can be, but the physics of what happens when anything changes from wet to dry is enough to grab ...
After spending years working at bakeries and restaurants, and putting her own twist on Parker House rolls and caramel sticky buns, among other delicacies, she's releasing her first cookbook, " A Good ...
A mystery that captivated the internet has a simple answer. At least, that’s what Colgate says ...
A new model suggests that many more mammal species than was previously known could host the creation of novel coronaviruses.
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