A portable biosensor developed at La Trobe University may allow rapid, on-site detection of toxic “forever chemicals” in water, removing the need for samples to be sent to specialist laboratories.
A portable biosensor developed at La Trobe University may allow rapid, on-site detection of toxic "forever chemicals" in water, removing the need for ...
A portable biosensor developed at La Trobe University may allow rapid, on-site detection of toxic "forever chemicals" in water, removing the need for ...
Crystalline quartz films grown on four-inch silicon wafers detect Chikungunya virus at sensitivities surpassing standard ...
La Trobe University developed a biosensor to enable detection of PFAS in water, removing the need to send samples to ...
Live Science spoke with Dr. Joe Alexander of NTT Research about "digital twins" and the development of an autonomous device ...
Through December 10, the world has seen 502,264 chikungunya cases worldwide, with 291,451 in the Americas region alone ...
Confirmed avian flu outbreaks have hit another five US states, affecting more than 128,000 birds, according to the US ...
Inside rooms designed to be among the most sterile places on Earth, scientists have just cataloged 26 forms of life that no ...
A collaborative team of researchers from the Donald Danforth Plant Science Center, the University of Florida, Gainesville and ...
Can you remove an O2 sensor with a standard wrench? Learn when you need a special socket, what's in a kit, and how thread ...
LG will add an option to delete the Microsoft Copilot shortcut from smart TV home screens in a future update The company clarified that Copilot isn ...