Would you eat a 3-D printed pizza?0
- From Around the Web, Science & Technology
- December 29, 2016
Could you imagine serving a 3-D printed turkey for Christmas lunch? Or munching on a 3-D printed pizza for an afternoon snack?
Could you imagine serving a 3-D printed turkey for Christmas lunch? Or munching on a 3-D printed pizza for an afternoon snack?
Ecologists published guidelines that identify factors for choosing which species our planet would be best served to revive.
China vowed Tuesday to speed up the development of its space industry as it set out its plans to become the first country to soft land a probe on the far side of the moon, around 2018, and launch its first Mars probe by 2020.
According to physicists, it will be a long time before gravitons are considered part of the established subatomic pantheon.
The universe is suspected to be loosing its mass ever since the big bang.
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Researchers at Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh have built their own “black hole” in the laboratory.
Scientists, including several from the University of California, Riverside, have developed a transparent, self-healing, highly stretchable conductive material that can be electrically activated to power artificial muscles and could be used to improve batteries, electronic devices, and robots.
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A tiny organism at the base of the food chain, but vital for life to exist on Earth, is under threat, according to data collected by a NASA satellite that has been firing a laser into the ocean for a decade.