A new study reveals how biological branching networks use surface geometry to shape blood vessels, brains, and plants.
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Game-changer: UK scientists build perovskite solar cells that retain 95% performance
Researchers at the University of Manchester have successfully stabilized perovskite solar cells, which could finally move the ...
Harmful algal blooms pose growing risks to freshwater ecosystems, drinking water security, and public health. Yet despite ...
For more than a century, scientists have wondered why physical structures like blood vessels, neurons, tree branches, and ...
Researchers in China have developed an electrical imaging technique using three-dimensional (3D) tomographic conductive atomic force microscopy (TC-AFM) to go beyond indirect characterization of ...
Earth system box models are essential tools for reconstructing long-term climatic and environmental evolution and uncovering ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Time might have 3 dimensions and the math gets ugly
Physicists are quietly advancing a radical idea: time might not be a single, thin line but a full three‑dimensional landscape ...
This winter marks a pivotal moment for OMTech—not just in new product releases, but in the evolution of the brand ...
UCSC engineer Javier Gonzalez-Rocha is using drones and sensors to bring advanced air quality monitoring to underserved ...
Popocatépetl emerged in the crater of other volcanoes in its current form more than 20,000 years ago and has been active ...
East Idaho News on MSN
Futuristic nuclear fuel shape mimics nature to dramatically improve performance
At the intersection of mathematics and nature, scientists have found intriguing and often beautiful designs. Pinecone scales ...
A 6,000-year-old skeleton that survived a lion attack has been found, providing exceptional evidence of prehistoric community ...
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