Aerosol microdroplets, the tiny particles that linger in the air longest after we talk, cough, or sneeze, do not appear to be extremely efficient at spreading the virus that leads to COVID-19.
Good things come in microscopic packages, according to the Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology’s new DROPLETS project. Good things come in microscopic packages, according to the ...
Sneezes, rain clouds, and ink jet printers: They all produce or contain liquid droplets so tiny it would take several billion of them to fill a liter bottle. Measuring the volume, motion and contents ...
The natural control of chlorophyll activity has now been discovered by a team of scientists, outlines a new report. DGIST announced that the research team of the fellow Hong-Gil Nam and the research ...
A system for culturing bacteria in microdroplets was developed at the IPC PAS a few years ago, however it was constructed on a polycarbonate plate. The maximum dimensions of the plate did not exceed ...
Researchers report that microdroplets formed by the polymerization of drying α-hydroxy acids, present at the time of the origin of life on Earth, can act as compartments for chemical reactions and ...
(Nanowerk News) Scientists from Nanyang Technological University, Singapore (NTU Singapore) have developed a novel method of delivering drugs into human cells using large biological molecules, by ...
Taking inspiration from similarly named electronic devices, Michele Zagnoni and Jonathan M. Cooper of the University of Glasgow, in Scotland, have developed a microdroplet-based “shift register,” a ...
LONDON, UK — More than 200 scientists have called for the World Health Organization and others to acknowledge that the coronavirus can spread in the air — a change that could alter some of the current ...