‘Unnatural’ microbe can make proteins0
- From Around the Web, Science & Technology
- December 2, 2017
An altered microbe with an “unnatural” genetic code has been shown to assemble proteins – a key step towards designing new drugs and materials.
An altered microbe with an “unnatural” genetic code has been shown to assemble proteins – a key step towards designing new drugs and materials.
A Turkish university is including a new course called “Ufology and Exopolitics” in its curriculum. The Dogan News Agency reported that the purpose of the class is to prepare students for the possibility of extraterrestrial contact.
NASA would like people to help name the object MU69 that the New Horizons’ team has discovered.
As the three Kings from the Orient brought gold to infant Jesus, a question that often crops up in our mind is that who brought gold to Earth in the first place when it was formed? Why was Mackenna crazy for his gold?
Another unidentified flying object was captured on video by NASA’s space cameras.
The best look yet at supposed Yeti samples also offers valuable insight into the genetic histories of rare Himalayan bears.
It was on a clear night in 1943 that the crew of the USS Williamson Navy Destroyer experienced an unexpected close encounter with multiple unidentified flying objects.
Scientists at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University have developed a variety of origami-inspired artificial muscles that can lift up to a thousand times their own weight — and yet be dexterous enough to grip and raise a delicate flower.
A paper recently published in the Journal of NeuroQuantology presents a unitary holofractogramic model that is redefining scientists’ view of the physics of consciousness and the seamless interplay of information dynamics from the most fundamental levels of the universe to the living system and the cosmos as a whole.
Physicists at CERN are working to determine why the equal amounts of matter and antimatter in the universe haven’t annihilated each other.