SCIENCE

Jul 21 2025SCIENCE

A New Way to Clean Up Pollution

Scientists have created a new tool to help clean up dirty water. They made special foam with tiny bits of graphene and a mix of nickel and cobalt. This foam can help break down a harmful chemical called 2, 3-dichlorophenol. The foam is put into a tube, and water flows through it. The foam uses light

reading time less than a minute
Jul 21 2025SCIENCE

Detecting Tiny Changes: How Scientists Track Harmful Chemicals in Our Bodies

Scientists have created a new tool to detect tiny changes in our bodies. This tool, called a biosensor, can find very small amounts of a harmful chemical called bisphenol A (BPA). BPA is found in many plastics and can cause problems in our bodies. The biosensor uses special materials called SrTiO3

reading time less than a minute
Jul 20 2025SCIENCE

Unlocking the Secrets of Aging: A Multiomics Approach

Aging is not just about wrinkles and gray hair. It's a complex process that affects every part of our bodies at the molecular level. Scientists have been studying aging for years, but traditional methods only scratch the surface. That's where multiomics comes in. This approach combines data from var

reading time less than a minute
Jul 20 2025SCIENCE

Harnessing Nature's Power: The Future of Solar Energy

The world is on the hunt for clean energy. Solar power is a big part of this. But there is a new kid on the block: dye-sensitized solar cells (DSSCs). These are different from the usual silicon solar panels. They use dyes to capture sunlight. And guess what? These dyes can come from nature. Nature

reading time less than a minute
Jul 20 2025SCIENCE

Unraveling the Genome's Hidden 3D Puzzle

Inside every cell, DNA is packed tightly, like a long, tangled thread. This packing is not random. It's crucial for how our genes work and how cells divide. Scientists have long debated how DNA folds up. Some think it's like a ball of yarn, while others believe it forms loops. Recent research has g

reading time less than a minute
Jul 20 2025SCIENCE

Exploring Magnetic Fields: How Spinal Cord Currents Create Tiny Signals

New, compact magnetic sensors are changing the game. They let scientists study tiny magnetic fields in a way that wasn't possible before. These fields come from electrical currents in the body, like those in the spinal cord and chest. Researchers ran simulations to see how these currents create magn

reading time less than a minute
Jul 20 2025SCIENCE

Ants' Dining Choices: A Smarter Approach to Pest Control

Ants might be small, but they can cause big problems. They damage crops and disrupt the environment. To manage these tiny troublemakers, scientists have turned to poisoned baits. The key here is that these baits must be irresistible to the specific ant species they are targeting. In the past, deter

reading time less than a minute
Jul 20 2025SCIENCE

Spit Science: How Kids' Saliva Might Hold Health Secrets

Kids' spit might be more useful than you think. Scientists are looking into how saliva can help us understand health. Inside spit, there are tiny molecules called volatile organic compounds, or VOCs. These come from different places, like breath, food, and even the air around us. The cool part? Thes

reading time less than a minute
Jul 19 2025SCIENCE

Unlocking Secrets: How Clobenprobit Fights Inflammation

Scientists have been digging into how clobenprobit (CB) and another compound, IT1t, work their magic to reduce inflammation. They've found that these compounds interact with a specific receptor in our bodies called CXCR4. This receptor is like a doorway that lets certain signals in, and CB and IT1t

reading time less than a minute
Jul 19 2025SCIENCE

Seawater Sludge Secrets: A Protein's Role in Granule Strength

Scientists have found a key protein in the sticky stuff that holds together sludge granules in seawater. This protein might be the reason these granules stay strong and can remove phosphate from water. The granules were grown in a special reactor using seawater and acetate, a common carbon source. T

reading time less than a minute