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Research into the physics of bubbles has found that, when they become laced with bacteria, bursting can turn them into a bioweapon. Away from the harmless pursuit of blowing bubbles, bubbles in ...
Innocent-looking bubbles can serve as a launching pad to spread bacteria from water into the air, according to a new study. The study, published Nov. 15 in the journal Physical Review Letters ...
A new study shows how bubbles contaminated with bacteria can act as tiny microbial grenades, bursting and launching microorganisms, including potential pathogens, out of the water and into the air.
A report issued earlier this month by the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases finds that many adults across the nation are forgetting or choosing not to wash their hands at key times when ...
RELATED: Ohio man contracts flesh-eating bacteria in Tampa Bay ... and by Easter morning his hand had black bubbles growing on his hand. "I had like little blisters starting to form on my hand ...
Walton says that by Easter Sunday, there were black bubbles growing on his ... but were able to remove bacteria. “When I woke up and [saw] my hand still attached, I was happy,” he said.
Others drive huge pollen-spraying rigs, or daub each flower by hand with a ... fears that the bubble solution itself could harm local insects, as well as the bacteria that naturally occurs on ...
SOAP TRAPS DIRT and fragments of the destroyed virus in tiny bubbles called ... of viruses and bacteria, suspending them in floating cages. When you rinse your hands, all the microorganisms ...