Everyday use of plastics in the kitchen releases microplastics into food and beverages, but there are practical solutions.
Discover Magazine on MSN
The Smallest Motors in History Can Fit Inside a Strand of Hair
Learn how the smallest motors in history could soon make a splash in healthcare thanks to microscopic gears that are powered ...
New research shows pollution particles can stick to red blood cells, traveling through the body—and masks may help stop them ...
MRI machines rely on massive superconducting magnets and complex software to produce detailed images of our organs and tissues. This video explains how engineers create stable magnetic fields and ...
Breakthrough “metamachines” show how beams of light can drive gears and levers smaller than a grain of dust—opening doors to ...
Opinion
MedPage Today on MSNYou Are What (Plastics) You Eat
As healthcare workers, we also have work to do with respect to our own plastic pollution. Anyone who's spent time in a ...
ESPN president of content Burke Magnus wants to assure all fans of “Inside The NBA” that his company is not going to mess around with the iconic show. When the “Inside The NBA” crew comes to ESPN this ...
FORT WAYNE, Ind. (WANE) — “I want your viewers to know we don’t shoot to kill. The Fort Wayne Police Department has never shot to kill; it’s to stop a threat.” Capt. Juan Barrientes, director of ...
The special operations line of power tools represents the pinnacle of underwater tool engineering. These variants operate at ...
The University of Miami findings add to growing evidence that microplastics from what we eat and drink can accumulate in unexpected parts of the body.
ESPN is trying its best to get fans of “Inside the NBA” to put down their pitchforks. Burke Magnus, ESPN’s president of content, spoke this week in an interview to Richard Deitsch of The Athletic.
Researchers at the University of Gothenburg have made light-powered gears on a micrometer scale. This paves the way for the smallest on-chip motors in ...
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