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The Vanguard

The 5 Coolest Things On Earth This Week

Sam Worley
July 27, 2019

Scientists created a gel that’s absolutely packed with bacteria-killing viruses, engineers designed a super sensitive microphone that can eavesdrop on the whispers of atoms, and researchers developed a test to quickly detect signs of sepsis in the bloodstream. This week’s coolest scientific discoveries are so small that you can’t see or hear them without special help — but their effects may be resounding.

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The Vanguard

The 5 Coolest Things On Earth This Week

Sam Worley
May 13, 2019

Microscopic viruses could be ammunition in the fight against antibiotics resistance, a new technique could solve a shortage of lungs for transplants, and an effective, low-cost method of desalination could make industrial waste less toxic. Things are really looking up in this week’s coolest scientific discoveries.

 

Turning A Phage On Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria

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The Vanguard

The 5 Coolest Things On Earth This Week

Sam Worley
February 22, 2019

Bone marrow implants could forestall neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer’s, synthetic DNA sheds light on how life might’ve evolved elsewhere in the universe, and computer-designed DNA could combat uncontrollable microbial infections. Find out what has been bugging scientists in this week’s coolest scientific discoveries.

 

Against Neurodegenerative Diseases, Scientists Find A Marrow Path To Victory

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The Vanguard

The 5 Coolest Things On Earth This Week

Sam Worley
October 21, 2018
In this week’s great leaps into the future, the world’s fastest camera captures light on the move, ultrasound levitation gets easier, fibers store energy in the body of a vehicle, and an ultralightweight glove promises to make gaming even better (and maybe improve surgery, too). Plus: probiotics beyond your morning yogurt.
 

 

Electric Cars That Are Just One Big Battery
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The Vanguard

The 5 Coolest Things On Earth This Week

Sam Worley
September 15, 2018
Humans can now pilot drones with their brains, scientists are making an end run around the bug that causes tuberculosis, and bacteria in the belly have been found to produce a charge. We’ve got a gut feeling there’s something that might electrify you, too, in this week’s premier scientific discoveries.
 

 

Three’s Company (When Telepathically Piloting Fighter Jets)
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Innovation

5 Coolest Things On Earth This Week

Tomas Kellner
February 24, 2017

Researchers built an AI that learned to how to code, found chemicals in a giant lizard’s blood that killed deadly bacteria, and proposed efficient wind turbines fashioned to behave like insect wings. This science will blow you away.
 

This AI Just Learned How To Code

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Innovation

5 Coolest Things On Earth This Week

Tomas Kellner
February 03, 2017
Scientists stared in the face of our 535-year-old ancestor, started a conversation between live and artificial cells and developed nanorobots powered by gastric acid that can deliver medicine to your stomach. We have more to chew on. Please, continue.
 

 

What Your Ancestors Looked Like 535 Million Years Ago
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Innovation

5 Coolest Things On Earth This Week

Tomas Kellner
December 02, 2016
AS: Unlike the previous computers, the GE-225 — as it was called — was a business computer. It stored its own software, handling the input and output of data. We relocated the factory to Phoenix and sold it within GE as well as to the external market. GE used them for general business applications and some scientific work, but mostly to do business processing. I was in charge of the small-computer-systems group, whose job it was to design the circuits, design the logic, plan the system and put it all together.
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Innovation

5 Coolest Things On Earth This Week

Tomas Kellner
July 31, 2016

This week we learned about German bacteriologists who picked a powerful new antibiotic made by a microbe that lives in people’s noses, a leaf-like solar cell that turns CO2 into usable fuel and an arctic heatwave that released anthrax spores from decades-old frozen reindeer. There’s more Proceed with caution.

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Antibiotics

Meet The Martyr Microbe: Killer Drug-Resistant Bacteria Blow Themselves Up To Empower Their Kin

May 21, 2016
They went back to their drawings, redesigned the compressor and started achieving higher thrust. Fort Knox, as well as the smokestack, still stands. Today, a small bronze plaque commemorates the feat.
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