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‘Butterfly Bot’ is Fastest Swimming Soft Robot Yet

Inspired by the biomechanics of the manta ray, researchers at North Carolina State University have developed an energy-efficient soft robot that can swim more than four times faster than previous swimming soft robots.

Technique Prints Flexible Circuits on Curved Surfaces, From Contact Lenses to Latex Gloves

Inspired by the biomechanics of the manta ray, researchers at North Carolina State University have developed an energy-efficient soft robot that can swim more than four times faster than previous swimming soft robots.

Ceramides Accumulate In The Aged Muscle – Researchers Identify A New Hallmark Of Ageing

Researchers have uncovered sphingolipid accumulation as a new mechanism that affects ageing. Ceramides, the best-known class of sphingolipids, accumulate in aged muscle, impairing its function while also affecting functional capacity in older adults.

Genetic ‘Hitchhikers’ Can Be Directed Using CRISPR

In a new study, North Carolina State University researchers characterize a range of molecular tools to rewrite – not just edit – large chunks of an organism’s DNA,

Researchers Eye Embroidery as Low-Cost Solution for Making Wearable Electronics

Embroidering power-generating yarns onto fabric allowed researchers to embed a self-powered, numerical touch-pad and movement sensors into clothing.

Common Veterinary Drugs Show Effectiveness Against Bed Bugs

Two common drugs used by veterinarians to combat parasites may be effective against bed bugs, with one showing especially strong potential,

Native Hawaiian Colorectal Cancer Patients Twice As Likely To Die From Sepsis

In Hawaiʻi, Native Hawaiian cancer patients have a two-fold increased risk of dying from sepsis, a life-threatening immune response to an infection, compared to other ethnicities, according to a new study co-authored by University of Hawaiʻi Cancer Center researchers.

Vog, Air Pollution Predicted To Hurt Hawaiʻi Student Test Scores

As Mauna Loa erupted in late November 2022 for the first time since 1984, the emissions produced vog or volcanic smog. Vog—a mixture of ash, sulfur dioxide and other gasses—may cause breathing difficulties, headaches, a sore throat, watery eyes and more to those living near and/or downwind of the vog plume.

Rare Unaltered Asteroid Sample Provides Clues To Early Solar System

Earth is constantly being bombarded by meteorites—from nearly invisible, dust-sized particles to large impactors that have changed the trajectory of life on our planet

Astronomers Use ‘Little Hurricanes’ To Weigh And Date Planets Around Young Stars

Little ‘hurricanes’ that form in the discs of gas and dust around young stars can be used to study certain aspects of planet formation, even for smaller planets which orbit their star at large distances and are out of reach for most telescopes.

Solar-Powered System Converts Plastic And Greenhouse Gases Into Sustainable Fuels

Researchers have developed a system that can transform plastic waste and greenhouse gases into sustainable fuels and other valuable products – using just the energy from the Sun.

Bering Land Bridge Formed Surprisingly Late During Last Ice Age, Study Finds

By reconstructing the sea level history of the Bering Strait, scientists found that the strait remained flooded until around 35,700 years ago, not long before humans began migrating into the Americas

Warming Oceans Have Decimated Marine Parasites — But That’s Not A Good Thing

More than a century of preserved fish specimens offer a rare glimpse into long-term trends in parasite populations.

UW’s Daniel Chen, ’22, Named Prestigious Marshall Scholar

University of Washington alumnus Daniel Guorui Chen, Class of 2022, has been named a Marshall Scholar, one of the highest honors available to college graduates in the U.S. Chen plans to attend the University of Cambridge.

Climate ‘Presses’ And ‘Pulses’ Impact Magellanic Penguins — A Marine Predator — With Guidance For Conservationists

Climate change will reshape ecosystems worldwide through two types of climate events: short-term, extreme events — like a heat wave — and long-term changes, like a shift in ocean currents. Ecologists call the short-term events “pulses,” and the long-term changes “presses.”

Patient-Specific Cancer Tumours Replicated in 3d Bioprinting Advance

Bowel cancer patients could in future benefit from a new 3D bioprinting technology which would use their own cells to replicate the complex cellular environment of solid tumours in 3D models.

People Smoke More When Smoking from Larger Size Cigarette Packets

People smoke more when smoking cigarettes from larger size packs, according to new research published in the journal Addiction today [3 November].

Association Between Poor Sleep Quality and an Increased Risk of Developing Alzheimer's, New Study Finds

New research has shown an association between sleep quality – less than seven hours - and Alzheimer's disease-related pathology in people without cognitive impairment.

Why The Ghost Particles Crashing Into Antarctica Could Change Astronomy Forever

About 47 million light-years from where you're sitting, the center of a black-hole-laden galaxy named NGC 1068 spits out streams of enigmatic particles. They're neutrinos -- otherwise known as the elusive "ghost particles" haunting our universe while leaving little trace of their existence.