Tech Xplore on MSN
Programmable 3D-printed filaments mimic artificial muscles with heat-driven bending and twisting
Nature is replete with slender filaments that bend and coil—from climbing grape vines, to folded proteins, to elephant trunks that can pick up a peanut but also take down a tree.
Researchers at Tampere University have recently demonstrated that light can be used to precisely reshape soft materials ...
Fence, the technology platform rebuilding the infrastructure of asset-backed finance, today announced $20 million in new funding, led by Galaxy Ventures.
If an alien in the Alpha Centauri star system were craving pizza, it would take tens of thousands of years to deliver it ...
Going forward, the competitive battleground will shift toward interoperability protocols, standardized reporting, and ...
Just as the human body relies on organs such as the heart or liver for essential functions, cells depend on their own tiny ...
Reju, the textile-to-textile regeneration leader, appears in Fashion Redressed, a branded content series presented by Global Fashion Agenda and produced for the GFA by BBC StoryWorks Commercial ...
As the spread of infectious diseases accelerates, technologies that can accurately distinguish multiple viruses in a single test are becoming ...
Elkem reported an EBITDA of NOK 249 million for the first quarter 2026, which was a decrease from NOK 710 million in the ...
Harvard researchers have developed a rotational multimaterial 3D printing technique to create filaments with pre-programmed shape changes, while Noctua has released free, accurate CAD models of its ...
IEEE Spectrum on MSN
Can biologists rewrite the genome’s spaghetti code?
New tools aim to turn DNA into something engineers can design ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results