Thanks to Tufts researchers, there’s now a solution that shoots, solidifies and even picks up objects. Alas, you can’t use it to swing between buildings.
We'll also keep you up to date with New Scientist events and special offers. A whole new world of tiny beings challenges fundamental ideas of life ...
The result is an astonishingly "Spider Man"-like silk that can be shot not unlike the superhero's wrist-mounted web shooters, as detailed in a paper published in the journal Advanced Functional ...
Scientists in Japan have developed a robotic hand eerily reminiscent of The Terminator, using lab-grown human muscle tissue ...
Scientists have created the world's thinnest spaghetti – though diners should not be expecting to find it on their plates any time soon. Or ever. This "nanopasta" was created as part of an ...
A torrent of disruptive Trump administration policies is alarming scientists who fear the current political climate is weakening researchers’ resolve to stick with careers in academic science.
An award-winning UK scientist warns that it might be too late to deflect the “city killer” asteroid that’s headed toward Earth. Deflection efforts “might not be able to stop 2024 YR4 ...
here's what the scientists who study sleep do to optimise their slumber A better understanding of our hormones and sleep could improve both The hormonal changes of puberty, the menstrual cycle and ...
Since my diagnosis, which I didn’t disclose for six years, I’ve come to recognize the contributions to biomedicine made by autistic scientists ... images of Rain Man and other strong ...
And if you think this is good news for the lady – and a confidence boost for the man – scientists are concerned it's actually a bad thing. Kris Kovarovic, researcher at Durham University's ...