New dyes that don’t fade are made of the same molecule that colors your skin0
- From Around the Web, Science & Technology
- September 19, 2017
Structural ‘supraball’ pigments could transform cosmetics and food.
Structural ‘supraball’ pigments could transform cosmetics and food.
Stanford neuroscientist E.J. Chichilnisky has a bold plan—Create implantable devices to restore vision to a number of people who have gone blind. But to do this, he’ll have to revolutionize the way electronic devices interface with the human brain.
The new iPhone X is shining a light on a Fifth Amendment debate.
You won’t read about a smaller robot than this one any time soon.
Scientists created a state of matter known as a time crystal, which seems to suspend the law of conservation of energy.
Jill Bolte Taylor recalls all the things she forgot.
We’re so close to the megazord of our dreams.
Northern China’s roadsides are peppered with deciduous phoenix trees, producing an abundance of fallen leaves in autumn. These leaves are generally burned in the colder season, exacerbating the country’s air pollution problem. Investigators in Shandong, China, recently discovered a new method to convert this organic waste matter into a porous carbon material that can be used to produce high-tech electronics.
For the average human, it is difficult at times to envision the Universe as a construct in 4-dimensions. Now a new study has discovered structures in the brain with up to eleven dimensions.
Move over kale.