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Plastic texturing kills viruses when they land

Researchers have developed a thin plastic film that tears apart viruses on contact, offering a promising new way to keep high-touch surfaces such as smartphones and hospital equipment from spreading disease. The innovation ...

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Bio & Medicine
Nanobody repairs misfolded CFTR inside cells, boosting function in cystic fibrosis
Bio & Medicine
How nanomedicine gets inside your cells and treats you from the inside out
Nanophysics
Electrons crack open organic solar cells, exposing their hidden 3D molecular architecture in a single microscope
Bio & Medicine
Color test 'sniffs out' dangerous staph strains fast
Bio & Medicine
Rapid melatonin test can help astronauts and others easily monitor their biological rhythm
Bio & Medicine
This nasal spray rewinds the aging brain, restoring memory and reversing inflammation in preclinical models
Nanomaterials
Graphene as a charge mirror: Why water droplets 'see' graphene—but don't show it
Nanophysics
The once-theoretical skyrmion could unlock supercomputing memory
Nanomaterials
AI-guided electron microscope provides unique glimpse into the world of MXenes
Bio & Medicine
Phospholipid asymmetry helps explain extracellular vesicle surface charge and therapeutic quality
Bio & Medicine
A new fruit wash removes pesticides and extends shelf life
Bio & Medicine
Ultrasound creates light inside the body, opening a new path to targeted treatments
Nanophysics
Gold nanorod makes spinning light when struck off-center by an electron beam
Bio & Medicine
Combining ion pumps and click chemistry enables precise drug release in the body
Bio & Medicine
Nanodiscs capture HIV and Ebola surface proteins in lifelike membranes for vaccine design
Bio & Medicine
Oxide-based sensor opens door to greener, faster, more accurate quality testing of food
Bio & Medicine
These nanotweezers grab thousands of tiny cell packets in seconds and expose their hidden cargo
Bio & Medicine
A nanoscale robotic cleaner can hunt, capture and remove bacteria
Nanomaterials
AI chips could get faster with 30-nanometer embedded memory that cuts data shuttling
Bio & Medicine
Using menstrual blood-derived particles to treat osteoarthritis

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General Physics
Neutrinos caught on camera: Testing the first prototype of a new elementary particle detector
Astronomy
'Aquila Booster' challenges theoretical limits of particle acceleration in pulsar wind nebulae
General Physics
New approach to detect ultra-rare part-per-sextillion isotopes could also sharpen dark matter searches
Astronomy
LAMOST maps open cluster NGC 1647, linking broad main sequence to differential reddening
Archaeology
42 lost pages of the new testament manuscript discovered
General Physics
Gravity's subtle effect on light could improve groundwater, volcano and carbon storage monitoring
Social Sciences
How deceptive content reached millions of voters during the 2020 US elections
Cell & Microbiology
High-resolution imaging shines light on nanoscale nuclear organization
Cell & Microbiology
Re-engineered human cells boost gene-editing particle potency across multiple delivery systems
Political science
Bipartisan-cited science is rarely used by policymakers, study finds
Analytical Chemistry
Simplifying clean hydrogen production with a new all-in-one photocatalytic cocatalyst
Analytical Chemistry
Natural-language AI helps chemists design molecules step by step
Analytical Chemistry
Machine learning identifies catalyst 'sweet spot' for greener urea from waste gases
Earth Sciences
Human-altered estuaries now drive stronger tides farther inland
Astronomy
Self-regulating process governs cosmic order inside star clusters
Astronomy
Sombrero Galaxy's vast halo emerges in rare detail 30 million light-years away
Cell & Microbiology
Chromosomes condense in three timed chemical waves during cell division, study shows
Plants & Animals
Promising H5N1 vaccine protects dairy calves and mice against severe disease
Ecology
A mother's gift: Plastid-derived structures help sea urchin development and dispersal
Ecology
One blue whale song unlocks oceans of data

Molecules as switches for sustainable light-driven technologies

Metal nanostructures can concentrate light so strongly that they can trigger chemical reactions. The key players in this process are plasmons—collective oscillations of free electrons in the metal that confine energy to extremely ...

Modulating key interaction prevents virus from entering cells

Washington State University researchers have found a way to modulate a common virus protein to prevent viruses from entering cells where it can cause illness, a discovery that could someday lead to new antiviral treatments.

Sensor uses acoustic waves to detect objects at smallest scales

At the heart of every camera is a sensor, whether that sensor is a collection of light-detecting pixels or a strip of 35-millimeter film. But what happens when you want to take a picture of something so small that the sensor ...