Imaging wall-less plant cells every six minutes for 24 hours revealed how the cells build their protective barriers.
A Stanford study shows that tiny electrical charges in water droplets caused reactions that developed organic matter from inorganic materials.
They found a new molecule named lariocidin —a potential new antibiotic with the power to kill some of the world’s most ...
In this edition of the LCGC Blog, Amber Hupp of the College of the Holy Cross reflects on her childhood and talks about her ...
Here's where the James Webb Space Telescope comes in. Its advanced technology, including its large mirror and suite of ...
Ultrafast electron imaging reveals never-before-seen nuclear motions in hydrocarbon molecules triggered by light. The ...
Researchers explore how natural compounds in traditional Chinese medicine can modulate cholesterol metabolism to combat ...
In the 1931 movie “Frankenstein,” Dr. Henry Frankenstein howling his triumph was an electrifying moment in more ways than one ...
A new study suggests that microscopic lightning bolts—called microlightning—within water droplets may have helped forge the ...
Researchers at the University of Missouri have developed an innovative electrochemistry method to create new molecules using ...
New microlightning research out of Stanford adds a "striking" twist to an existing theory about how life may have originated ...