The Spike S-512 Supersonic Jet: World’s Fastest Airliner with 1,370 mph Speed...
In an attempt of re-inventing the future of travel, Spike Aerospace has unleashed the world’s fastest airliner, the S-512 Supersonic Jet. Effortlessly, the S-512 is able to touch a supersonic gliding...
View ArticleGreen Future: PlasticRoads an Alternative to Tar and Asphalt road surfaces
Experts worldwide keep finding new ways to recycle plastic waste. Qualities like lightweight, moisture resistant, flexible and relatively cheap have increased production and consumption of plastic...
View ArticleCytosponge Pill can detect Csophageal Cancer at an Early Stage: Cure for Cancer
A research team from the University of Cambridge has found a way for early detection of esophageal cancer, which is also the eighth most common cancer type worldwide. Conspicuous symptoms of the cancer...
View ArticleMusic Lessons facilitate Neurodevelopment: Enhancing the Teenage Brain
According to a study conducted by Northwestern University, music training may help in enhancing brain’s responses to sound, hone hearing and language skills in teenagers even if it is introduced as...
View ArticleBionic Eye allows blind man to see again: The Eyeborg
Experts at Manchester Royal Eye Hospital have successfully restored the vision of 80 years old Ray Flynn, through implanting ‘bionic eye’. For the last eight years, Mr Flynn suffered from dry...
View ArticleAir Capture Technology to Trap CO2: Carbon Engineering’s Initiative for Green...
A Canadian company known as Carbon Engineering (CE) has designed an innovative technology to capture atmospheric carbon dioxide and utilizing the captured carbon dioxide for the generation of ultra low...
View ArticleTiny Insect Eye Motion Sensor: Giving Sight to Mini Drones
Based on the vision systems of insects, researchers have created petite artificial eye for autonomous flying drones. This would make drones more practical by helping in smooth navigation, avoiding...
View ArticleAdvanced sense of odor helps ants identify individual ants: Nestmate versus...
Scientists studying ants have always wondered how ants living in huge colonies, identify other ants belong to same colony or is an intruder or enemy ant. Researchers from The University of California,...
View ArticleMicro fish to sense toxins & deliver drugs: 3D printed Nanobots
Nanoengineering experts at the University of California, San Diego, using advanced 3D printed technology have designed micro robots, named as micro fish. As the name suggests these tiny robots are fish...
View ArticleHead-up Display for Passenger Vehicles: In-car Technology
Researchers at Cambridge have unleashed an era of Head-up displays (HUD) using laser holographic techniques. The technology has introduced for the first time into Jaguar Land Rover vehicles. The human...
View ArticleBook Review: Xodus by K.J. McPike
Xodus is KJ McPike’s debut novel that falls into YA Sci-Fi Fantasy genre. The book is an engaging piece that revolves around a sixteen-year-old protagonist, Xitlali, who happens to discover her ability...
View ArticleTF-X a reality by 2018: An Era of Flying Car Begins
Massachusetts-based Terrafugia aims to provide true door-to-door transportation with a flying car within the next decade. The firm’s concept vehicle TF-X is a solution to the ever-growing traffic,...
View ArticleBook Review: Total Recall: My Unbelievably True Life Story by Arnold...
Arnold Schwarzenegger is an epitome of success and Total Recall: My Unbelievably True Life Story has beautifully put forth his journey from Mr. Olympia to Terminator and finally to Governorship. One of...
View ArticleObesity May Trigger The Progression Of Brain Ageing: Neurobiology Of Aging
Over the years, various researches across neurobiology of aging have suggested that brain shrinks with age. A recent study led by the University of Cambridge has added that obesity may also trigger the...
View ArticleMicrobeads To Deliver Medicines in the Body: Microswimmer Robots (w/Video)
With the advancement in the medical field, scientists are trying to develop non-invasive treatment techniques. In one such study carried out by scientists, from Drexel University in Philadelphia, have...
View ArticleBook Review: The Eternal Nazi by Nicholas Kulish and Souad Mekhennet
The Eternal Nazi: From Mauthausen to Cairo, the Relentless Pursuit of SS Doctor Aribert Heim is written by Nicholas Kulish and Souad Mekhennet. It is a semi biographical sketch of SS officer Aribert...
View ArticleIo’s Atmosphere Is Daily Collapsing And Repairing: The Jupiter System
Documenting atmospheric changes in eclipse on Io, the innermost of the four Galilean moons of the planet Jupiter, has always been a challenging job. The darkness caused by planet’s shadow makes it...
View ArticleUshering An Era of Quantum Computers with Built-in Optics: The Qubit Technology
Quantum computers are hypothetical devices with higher computational power than a traditional computer. The classical system involves bits as the smallest unit of data, that is represented by 0 or 1,...
View ArticleNew Building Material From Waste Plastic: RePlast The Future Of Plastics
Plastic waste management is one of the major problems worldwide. Plastics production utilizes valuable fossil feedstock and has a notable carbon impact. They are not only hard to decompose but are also...
View ArticleMuscles Powered Biohybrid Devices: Robotics with Tissue Engineering
Let’s picture the word, “Robot”, immediately, we get a glimpse of self operating machines, with nuts-and-bolts as building blocks. These machines are permeating all sections of our society. Machine...
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