A decade ago, a small and unassuming brain sample arrived at Dr. Jeff Lichtman's lab at Harvard University. Measuring less than a grain of rice, the 1 cubic millimeter of tissue contained 57,000 cells and 150 million synapses, each one a vital part
While 3D printing might have been around for a while, its capabilities are still somewhat limited and many don't quite realise what the extent is that it can do.
Fully-developed in 2011, aqueous zinc-ion batteries haven't entered the market in any truly measurable way. The most publicized use in the modern economy today is probably the EOS 1.0 GWh energy storage plant for solar power in Texas.
In theor
Our history has been an endless but futile struggle to impose order, certainty and rationality onto a Universe defined by disorder, chance and chaos. And, in the 21st century, this tendency seems to be only increasing as calamities in the social worl
After the triple sequence of a long-duration G3 geomagnetic storm followed by a S3 proton radiation storm and then a G4/G5 geomagnetic storm, Earth has become SUPERCHARGED, and over the next few weeks multiple unusual structures will emerge around ou
If you've ever woken up in the middle of the night with sudden painful thigh, calf or foot cramping, you'll know just how awful the experience is – and, unfortunately, the frequency of these nighttime disturbances increases with age.
As more bacteria that cause diseases become increasingly resistant to antibiotics, we need more ways to fight off infections. That's where this new patch comes in. With just a gentle electric zap, this bioelectronic wearable could prevent bacteria fr
Ms. Joyce is far from alone in fearing the wrath of the crow. CrowTrax, a website started eight years ago by Jim O'Leary, a Vancouver resident, has since received more than 8,000 reports of crow attacks in the leafy city, where crows are relatively
Davis has recently been interviewed by several internet podcasters in mind blowing discussions about his breakthrough findings and home remedy treatment for Small Intestinal Bowel Overgrowth or SIBO (aka endotoxemia, leaky gut sepsis). According to D
...For Fruits and Vegetables. A 9th grader from Snellville, Georgia, has won the 3M Young Scientist Challenge, after inventing a handheld device designed to detect pesticide residues on produce.
How would you like to visit your local nuclear power facility and maybe go for a swim in its indoor pool? Or hang out and look at art ... Maybe even just sit with friends and enjoy a cup of coffee in the warm glow of nuclear power?
Our very special guest Dr Judy Mikovits returns to the show to provide an update on vaccines, healthcare industry, medical freedom, propaganda, accountability, censorship, RFK Jr on Trump's team promoting healthy practices (in farming, food, medicine
Casey Putsch, speaks about how his prototype Omega Car was ignored by the automotive and mainstream media after achieving 104.73 miles per gallon and 0-60 mph in 4.61 seconds inspire of getting coverage in the past before it accomplished anything.
The world's largest prime number has been discovered, but we can't show it because it's so large it would take up 21 standard-sized novels to turn into text. Called M136279841, its shorthand version is 2136,279,841-1. That comes to 41,024,320 digits.
Who says nothing interesting ever happens in the world anymore? This week, in a "first of its kind" operation, a brain-dead human subject was implanted with the world's first gene-edited pig liver transplant, according to SCMP.
It all started when the second-ever heart transplant was performed. They surgically removed a heart out of a 3-day old baby and transplanted it into an 18-day old baby, in New York. A short time after, both babies were dead. It was illegal and it was
Jack Kruse is a neurosurgeon who focuses on the study of physics, light, magnetism, and electricity. He ultimately concluded that modern medicine lacked a deep understanding of how humans function in relation to the natural world.
When you arrange cylindrical cans in a cabinet, you're solving a packing problem. Those pyramids of oranges you see in the produce sections of grocery stores settle an important 17th-century conjecture by the astronomer Johannes Kepler. At the star
You can think of it as being similar to a 39 ft tall (12 m), 75-ton, autonomous 3D printer that spits out carbon-fiber layers at 328 ft (100 m) per minute. Instead of "printing" pieces, it lays carbon fiber sheets in various directions, layer by la
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