To address the unmet need for a cure for RTT, the therapeutic potential of adult Neural Precursor Cells (NPCs) was ...
A research team has successfully recreated the structure of wrinkles in biological tissue in vitro, uncovering the mechanisms behind their formation.
Anthropocene Magazine published by Future Earth on MSN23h
See-through solar cells that soak up the sun
The new design offers a glimpse of a future in which phones, laptop screens, or even car windows could harness sunlight for ...
Courtesy of Maggie Bartlett via Wikimedia Commons  What if you could make your skin transparent and then turn it opaque again? Soon enough, that might be a possibility. And if you’re a lab mouse, ...
But now, a team of Stanford University scientists has finally found an agent that can reversibly make skin transparent ...
A collaboration between four MIT groups, led by principal investigators Laura L. Kiessling, Jeremiah A. Johnson, Alex K.
How the hydrolytic activity of mitochondrial ATP synthase is modulated during brown adipose tissue (BAT) thermogenesis ...
Researchers at Stanford University made the skin of mice transparent using the yellow no. 5 food dye, otherwise known as ...
In a new study, scientists used a common yellow food coloring mixed with water to make the skin and skulls on live mice transparent.
According to its 2024 Sustainability Report, which was released today, First Solar, Inc. (Nasdaq: FSLR) has established new industry benchmarks including verifiable leadership in ultra low-carbon ...
Why isn't your body transparent? Some animals such as jellyfish, zebra fish and some glass frogs have see-through bodies. But most mammals, including humans, aren't transparent.
Using common food dye, researchers make skin and muscle safely and reversibly transparent. Scientists at Stanford University have developed a groundbreaking technique using food-safe dye to make ...