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Researchers have developed an AI-driven nanothermometer that uses invisible light to create 3D temperature maps inside living tissue, enabling safer, noninvasive diagnostics.
Researchers find that drying hydrogels briefly turns them into strong, reversible adhesives, opening new uses in robotics and material handling.
( Nanowerk News) Macquarie University astronomers have tracked an extreme planet's orbital decay, confirming it is spiralling ...
Researchers discovered that twisting 2D materials improves toughness while preserving strength, paving the way for durable electronics and smart devices.
Chemically enriched photo-thermoelectric imagers built from semiconducting carbon nanotube films show improved signal ...
Researchers develop a novel method to predict alloy microstructures with unprecedented speed and accuracy. (Nanowerk News) ...
A new AI tool trained on real microscopy data simulates nanoparticle movement with high accuracy, helping scientists decode ...
A new study introduces a radical change in the understanding of the first moments after the Big Bang, without relying on the ...
These novel materials can change, fix, and retain their shape reversibly by using magnetic fields and ultraviolet light.
Mid-infrared optoacoustic microscopy technology enables real-time visualization of protein changes inside living myeloma ...
A new skin-like sensor could help doctors monitor vital signs more accurately, track healing after surgery and even help ...
A glucose-sensitive nanovaccine delivers CRISPR to tumors, silences immune-suppressing genes, and activates a targeted immune response against cancer.
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