Watch Cancer Cells Scurrying Over the Surface of a Microchip
Scientists say that this ability to actually see the cancer cells advance will be useful to figure out how to stop them once and for all.
Scientists say that this ability to actually see the cancer cells advance will be useful to figure out how to stop them once and for all.
Who doesn't want a carpet that's stylish and pretty?
Plus it's biodegradable so it'll disappear as the bone regrows.
What we're seeing here are some important baby steps as man strives to finally build the perfect robot butler.
Glioblastoma multiforme is a cancer that's as deadly as it sounds. The good news is that we now have a technique to potentially treat it.
Hydrogen can be devastating, but in the right hands, it can also be awesome.
Disney's research arm has created a custom algorithm that will turn anything oddly shaped or asymmetrical into a perfectly balanced spinning top. So a Mickey Mouse-head spinning top is definitely on the way.
According to an Ofcom study of 2,800 people, Brits spend an average of eight hours and 41 minutes a day using tech compared to an average sleeping time of eight hours and 21 minutes.
These devices are all designed to solve a problem and make the world a better place. And not a single one of the creators is over 18.
Researchers at MIT have developed a flexible skin-like material covered in thousands of tiny magnetic hairs that can move in varying directions in the presence of a magnetic field.
I mean, why bother with fieldwork if you can do it at your desk?
A team of scientists from Sheffield University is using a new material to create a solar paint that could make an elusive technology more affordable.
The device is more than 1,000 times smaller than the width of a human hair, or 100 times smaller than a single red blood cell.
If humanity hopes to realise its dreams of exploring the stars, we're going to need to find ways to recreate life on Earth aboard a spaceship.
We don't need to tell you how important this is.
Solids and silicon store all our tweets, texts, and selfies, but what if the traditional ways of computing underwent a phase change?