Tech Xplore on MSN
Programmable 3D-printed filaments mimic artificial muscles with heat-driven bending and twisting
Nature is replete with slender filaments that bend and coil—from climbing grape vines, to folded proteins, to elephant trunks that can pick up a peanut but also take down a tree.
Researchers developed a rotational 3D printing method that builds lattices with programmable shape morphing, an advance that could quickly advance 4D printing.
The mother complex can shape how we give and receive care, trust, and love, influencing relationships in ways often outside ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Harvard scientists design elephant-inspired 3D-printed filaments for soft robotics
Researchers have developed a 3D printing strategy to create programmable artificial muscles. Harvard’s SEAS ...
The Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument spent five years observing the sky from Arizona. Now, researchers have a trove of ...
New Scientist on MSN
Weird 'transdimensional' state of matter is neither 2D nor 3D
An experiment with a carbon material in a magnetic field has revealed a novel way for electrons to move, which doesn't fully ...
Materials called relaxor ferroelectrics have been used for decades in technologies like ultrasounds, microphones, and sonar ...
Tester Heather Riesebeck took one of these peach gummies every day for 3 weeks, in the lowest dose, and reported feeling the effects about 45 minutes afterward. She primarily uses CBD gummies for ...
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