ScienceDaily: Strange Science News |
- Quantum physics provides a way to hide ignorance
- New extinct family of giant wombat relatives discovered in Australian desert
- Bioengineered uteri support pregnancy
- Laser-welded sugar: Sweet way to 3D-print blood vessels
- Wearable-tech glove translates sign language into speech in real time
- New 3D model shows how the paradise tree snake uses aerial undulation to fly
- How volcanoes explode in the deep sea
- Clostridium difficile: Fecal microbial transplantation more effective and less costly than antibiotics
- Humans and monkeys show similar thinking patterns
- Soft coral garden discovered in Greenland's deep sea
- First measurement of spin-orbit alignment on planet Beta Pictoris b
Quantum physics provides a way to hide ignorance Posted: 29 Jun 2020 09:02 AM PDT Students can hide their ignorance and answer questions correctly in an exam without their lack of knowledge being detected by teachers -- but only in the quantum world. |
New extinct family of giant wombat relatives discovered in Australian desert Posted: 29 Jun 2020 09:02 AM PDT A giant marsupial that roamed prehistoric Australia 25 million years ago is so different from its wombat cousins that scientists have had to create a new family to accommodate it. |
Bioengineered uteri support pregnancy Posted: 29 Jun 2020 09:02 AM PDT Scientists were able to show that bioengineered uteri in an animal model developed the native tissue-like structures needed to support normal reproductive function. |
Laser-welded sugar: Sweet way to 3D-print blood vessels Posted: 29 Jun 2020 09:02 AM PDT Bioengineers have shown they can keep densely packed cells alive in lab-grown tissues by creating complex networks of branching blood vessels from templates of 3D-printed sugar. |
Wearable-tech glove translates sign language into speech in real time Posted: 29 Jun 2020 09:02 AM PDT Bioengineers have designed a glove-like device that can translate American Sign Language into English speech in real time though a smartphone app. The system includes a pair of gloves with thin, stretchable sensors that run the length of each of the five fingers. These sensors, made from electrically conducting yarns, pick up hand motions and finger placements that stand for individual letters, numbers, words and phrases. |
New 3D model shows how the paradise tree snake uses aerial undulation to fly Posted: 29 Jun 2020 09:01 AM PDT For more than 20 years, a biomedical engineering and mechanics professor has sought to measure and model the biomechanics of snake flight and answer questions about them, like that of aerial undulation's functional role. |
How volcanoes explode in the deep sea Posted: 29 Jun 2020 09:01 AM PDT Explosive volcanic eruptions are possible deep down in the sea -- although the water masses exert enormous pressure there. |
Posted: 29 Jun 2020 09:01 AM PDT An innovative treatment for patients with Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) which uses transplanted gut bacteria to treat the infection, is a more effective and more cost-efficient treatment than using antibiotics, a new study has found. |
Humans and monkeys show similar thinking patterns Posted: 29 Jun 2020 06:00 AM PDT Humans and monkeys may not speak the same lingo, but our ways of thinking are a lot more similar than previously thought, according to new research. |
Soft coral garden discovered in Greenland's deep sea Posted: 29 Jun 2020 06:00 AM PDT A deep-sea soft coral garden habitat has been discovered in Greenlandic waters using an innovative and low-cost deep-sea video camera built and deployed by the team. |
First measurement of spin-orbit alignment on planet Beta Pictoris b Posted: 29 Jun 2020 06:00 AM PDT Astronomers have made the first measurement of spin-orbit alignment for a distant 'super-Jupiter' planet, demonstrating a technique that could enable breakthroughs in the quest to understand how exoplanetary systems form and evolved. |
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