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Scientists tattooed tardigrades using ice lithography, demonstrating a method that could lead to biocompatible microelectronics and futuristic biomedical technologies. If you haven’t heard of a ...
Tardigrades are already the stuff of legend — tiny, eight-legged creatures that can survive freezing, boiling, starvation, ...
These microorganisms are so tough that India is launching them to space to study how they survive in extreme environments.
This is the first step toward eventually wielding their extremophile superpowers in health science and nanotechnology.
Pour agir sur la matière vivante à l'échelle nanométrique, des scientifiques ont tatoué des tardigrades, des êtres minuscules et très résistants.
They put the tardigrades onto surfaces cooled to below -226 degrees Fahrenheit (-143 degrees Celsius), and covered the tiny ...
If you haven’t heard of a tardigrade before, prepare to be wowed. These clumsy, eight-legged creatures, nicknamed water bears ...
The frozen anisole protected the tardigrade's surface from the focused electron beam as it drew the pattern. When exposed to the beam, the anisole reacted and formed a new biocompatible chemical ...
Then, the researchers placed an individual tardigrade onto a carbon-composite paper, cooled the sheet below -226°F (-143°C), and covered the water bear with a protective layer of anisole—an ...