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Chemistry World January 28, 2015 Emma Stoye |
Live insects pictured with electron microscope Takahiko Hariyama's group at Hamamatsu University in Japan had developed a coating that allowed insect larvae to survive in the vacuum chamber of a scanning electron microscope, enabling whole living creatures to be imaged at very high resolution. |
Fast Company Vivian Giang |
How Smiling Changes Your Brain We know smiling can greatly improve your mood and reduce stress. Even better, your smile doesn't have to be real, so you can fake it and still get the same results. |
Chemistry World January 28, 2015 Emma Stoye |
Tiny volcanic cracks 'incubated' ancient DNA Tiny pores within volcanic rocks on ancient Earth may have provided the ideal conditions for replicating molecules, and could also have driven the evolution of longer and longer genetic sequences, researchers in Germany have shown. |
Chemistry World January 27, 2015 Jonathan Midgley |
Plant plaster protects wine from vine decline The new patch developed by Alexander Yarin, of the University of Illinois, contains a dense network of nanofibers and can be directly applied to the vine to physically prevent disease spores from entering a wound. |
Information Today January 27, 2015 |
EBSCO Partners With AMA to Promote Medical Journals EBSCO Information Services expanded its partnership with the AMA (American Medical Association) to further promote the global visibility and adoption of the AMA's medical journals. |
Chemistry World January 23, 2015 Simon Neil |
Self-cleaning sensors see the light Scientists in Italy have engineered a cheap and simple electrochemical sensor that cleans itself when exposed to ultraviolet light. |
Chemistry World January 19, 2015 Jenny Lovell |
Chitosan bioelectrode sustains metabolic power to medical implants Researchers in France have used compounds extracted from shrimp shells and gardenia fruits to extend the lifetime of medical implants attempting to run on bodily fluids. |
Chemistry World January 19, 2015 Maria Burke |
Roadmap to fast track Ebola vaccine development A global group of experts has developed a 'roadmap' to help the health community fast track an Ebola vaccine. |
Chemistry World January 16, 2015 Emma Stephen |
Caddisfly silk gets shocked into self-recovery The tough, extendable, energy-dissipating properties of the casemaker caddisfly's adhesive silk are down to a self-recovering network of calcium cross links, new research shows. |
Chemistry World January 16, 2015 John Hudson |
Fred Sanger -- double Nobel laureate: a biography Fred Sanger, who died in 2013 aged 94, is one of only four people to have won two Nobel prizes, and the only person to have received the chemistry prize twice. |
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