Their results, published in the journal Science Advances, suggest algae could be part of a brighter, more sustainable future.
Imagine a sea of glowing blue lights pulsing to the beat of the music. But instead of glow sticks filled with toxic chemicals, the luminescence comes from living algae, shimmering on demand. In a new ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
‘Einstein’s flying mirror’ inspires scientists to build powerful light beams
A team of researchers from the University of Oxford and Queen’s University Belfast in ...
Researchers at Stanford have developed a compact optical amplifier that dramatically boosts light signals using very little power. By recycling energy inside a looping resonator, the device achieves ...
A new European-led telescope could map the dusty, hidden half of the universe, all without using fossil fuels. If you have ...
Patch Development scored a tax break for a planned $7M Fishers HQ, adding to the city’s recent development surge.
Anicka Yi questions humans’ place in the world through work that focuses on some of the tiniest life-forms out there. At ...
A new optical device allows researchers to generate and switch between two stable, donut-shaped light patterns called skyrmions. These light vortices hold their shape even when disturbed, making them ...
The Samsung Galaxy Book 6 Pro starts at Rs 2,14,990, and it brings a 3K AMOLED panel, next-gen Intel processing and a battery ...
One of the biggest pieces of advice experts give for dressing in the heat is simple: avoid dark clothing. And a recent ...
An asteroid named 2026JH2 will swing by Earth on Monday, passing four times closer than our distance to the moon.
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