A new dual-light microscope lets researchers observe micro- and nanoscale activity inside living cells without using dyes. The system captures both detailed structures and tiny moving particles at ...
MetLife Stadium's playing surface may have claimed another NFL star. On Sunday, New York Giants phenom Malik Nabers was carted off the field with an apparent knee injury during the second quarter of ...
I have a colleague who's using an Omax A35 camera with ToupLite software to make micrographs. The issue with it is that the ToupLite software is not very good; I suspect it's a half-hearted port of a ...
Using a tiny, spherical glass lens sandwiched between two brass plates, the 17th-century Dutch microscopist Antonie van Leeuwenhoek was the first to officially describe red blood cells and sperm cells ...
Zack Wheeler under microscope for Phillies in series finale at Rangers Some of the questions surrounding the health of Philadelphia's Zack Wheeler could be answered when the ace right-hander takes the ...
Watch quick-thinking elephant rescue drowning gazelle with its trunk Chris Mullin Opens Up About Parting Ways with the Warriors Michelin Star-winning Texas barbecue icon fires up West Coast outpost ...
A microscope’s job is to magnify the minuscule world around us. We can observe the tiniest objects, organisms and materials, and investigate their form, texture and composition, to witness what would ...
Science is one of the most fruitful sources of new terminology. There’s nothing like a surfeit of terms like “mitochondrial synthesis” and “quantum fluctuations” to make your writing sound ...
In context: 3D printing is slowly becoming mainstream, having moved beyond functional prototyping, rapid tooling, trinkets, and toys. We have already seen people use 3D printers to create fashion ...
Delta Star donates $54,000 van to Lynchburg Daily Bread Delta Star has donated a new $54,000 van to Lynchburg Daily Bread, a nonprofit organization dedicated to delivering meals to underserved ...
The subatomic world is hard to image not just because it’s incredibly tiny, but super fast too. Now physicists at the University of Arizona have developed the world’s fastest electron microscope to ...