Gut juice could power the next generation of health gadgets
During a trip through pig intestines, devices could measure temp and deliver drugs.
During a trip through pig intestines, devices could measure temp and deliver drugs.
With FDA-approval, company gets valuable voucher and 7 years of no competition.
Space Launch System? Falcon Heavy? New Glenn? Fly, then debate.
But we have no idea whether it’s evolutionarily valuable.
Previously undetected, these black holes could be the seeds of supermassive ones.
Trained on quantum mechanics, the network handles multi-body wavefunctions.
Patient advocates are urging FDA and drug companies to set the bar higher.
France’s Flamanville plant due for a new reactor in 2018 just as a fire starts in a turbine room.
ACLU: Documents in TSA's files say program "is unscientific and unreliable."
In mice, armed bacteria infiltrated human tumors and triggered destruction.
New holographic imaging lets researchers track bacteria colliding with walls.
Like everyone else, climate negotiators are slow to incorporate new information.
Passive monitoring system allowed dangerous device in ORs for years.
In a letter, senators asked about pricing structure and federal reimbursements.
These transient features are so named because they last about 20 milliseconds.
Continued accusations against NOAA climate scientists were also on the agenda.
"Synthetic controls" give health researchers a better statistical tool.
Hearing loss starts young, new CDC report finds.
Big-ass laser and fast mirrors may bring black hole death to the lab.
Man describes quickly packing and fleeing; heart data shows otherwise, doctor says.
“Please don’t jump in, because this would be the last day on my job."
Sulphuric rain? Easy. Not burning up at 500°C or crushed by 90 atmospheres? Hard.
Zika, flu, and other known threats, but surprises always expected, expert says.
Liquid water on Mars' surface, but not enough CO2 above to keep it there.
A new report form the Solar Foundation complements Energy Department numbers.
In pilot study, microbial “fingerprints” turn up on loved ones and office items.
The X-rays appeared suddenly a decade ago and have not gone away.
As ever, the world spins, time passes, and things come back around.