Researchers at Graz University of Technology found that ordinary espresso can replace toxic uranyl acetate for electron ...
Using machine learning to guide microscopes could reveal greater insights into the brain's connectome and deepen our ...
STERLING HEIGHTS — Sterling Heights residents gave an overwhelming thumbs-up to city services and operations in the latest ...
Scientists have identified a marine fungus that was previously unknown and is capable of killing toxic algae known to ...
Cecilia Van Cauwenberghe explains how to measure the future using nanoscale metrology and discusses the global competition ...
A multidisciplinary team co-led by the UAB has uncovered a key mechanism that allows the human bacterium Mycoplasma pneumoniae—responsible for ...
Quantitative determination of Al(III) using a carbon sensor reveals accurate measurements in real samples such as soft drinks ...
The presence of a mysterious red substance has revealed a toxic discovery in a 2,000-year-old grave in southern Ukraine.
Researchers at TU Graz have proven that espresso is a favourable alternative to the highly toxic and radioactive uranyl acetate in the analysis of biological samples.
Plastic pollution is not just in oceans and soil. Scientists have now found enormous amounts of microscopic plastic floating ...
Efficiently identify and map tire fillers with streamlined material analysis—explore the details in this application note.
Over the last 20 years, scientists have come to recognize microplastics (MPs) and nanoplastics (NPs) as a growing form of ...