But I guess how else would one attach microscopic hairs to existing microscopic hairs?
|
|
We may be un-microscopic animals, but we can still peer into the microscopic world.
|
|
"We know they eat other microscopic animals, and other microscopic animals will probably also try to predate them," says Neves.
|
|
Related: Weave Your Way Through Magnified Photos of Fabric | Conservation Lab Microscopic Slivers of Artworks Reveal Hidden Truths | Conservation Lab Microscopic Photos of Wood Are Gorgeous Biological Abstractions | Conservation Lab
|
|
"The laser evaporates tiny microscopic zones of tissue, almost like it drills tiny holes in the skin in a microscopic fashion, and that allows the scar to remodel itself," Rokhsar said.
|
|
"Microscopic pieces they couldn't get were left behind," she said.
|
|
There are microscopic "singles bars" in the sea, male whale
|
|
Some contain microscopic sculptures you can't even see without magnification.
|
|
Examples of the Nurugo Micro's ability to capture microscopic images.
|
|
This microscopic image shows adult thimble jellyfish or sea lice.
|
|
Microscopic image of Hemimastix kukwesjijk, a new species of hemimastigotes.
|
|
Cyclosporiasis is an intestinal illness caused by a microscopic parasite.
|
|
It's a microscopic portion of [the investments that institutions make].
|
|
Particulate matter are small, microscopic particles that shouldn't be inhaled.
|
|
Regardless of the subject, each is packed with microscopic consideration.
|
|
How would a designer of microscopic robots, or a biochemist?
|
|
Microscopic plant fossils called phytoliths told them about ancient vegetation.
|
|
Why are there microscopic artworks clustered inside every living thing?
|
|
Instead, microscopic worms infested her body, causing catastrophic and irreversible damage.
|
|
It provides a habitat for an entire community of microscopic critters.
|
|
You also share bugs—microscopic organisms (think bacteria, fungi, and viruses).
|
|
Such microscopic distinctions often come in the form of split decisions.
|
|
It's exceptionally hard to spot [surveillance] equipment these days; it's microscopic.
|
|
That's a microscopic amount of time in No Man's Sky terms.
|
|
Microscopic image showing cell death of the human neural progenitor cells.
|
|
But these microscopic creatures are far more indestructible than we thought.
|
|
Robots crawl underwater to test subsea equipment for microscopic metal cracks.
|
|
Gelband took us through a series of almost microscopic leg movements.
|
|
He's averaging 216 points per game with a microscopic 214.3 PER.
|
|
Think of it like a microscopic IV with no physical traces.
|
|
Inside his lab in Israel, Jeff Steinhauer crafts microscopic black holes.
|
|
Cyanobacteria are microscopic single-celled organisms that produce oxygen through photosynthesis.
|
|
Ticks also spread microscopic parasites that attack your red blood cells.
|
|
Turns out, microscopic details can make all the difference to geopolitics.
|
|
Still, I perpetuate some of them in photographs and microscopic slides.
|
|
When that person leaves, microscopic droplets containing the virus stay behind.
|
|
But sometimes garnets are marred with intricate traceries of microscopic tunnels.
|
|
Even broken down to microscopic crumbs, plastic will still be plastic.
|
|
The texture is extraordinary: silky but crunchy, like microscopic bubble-wrap.
|
|
The capillaries that had formed were microscopic and they weren't working.
|
|
Tardigrades are microscopic organisms with a reputation for being practically indestructible.
|
|
You don't know what microscopic creatures are crawling across your screen.
|
|
Microscopic images of hair, skin, and grime are magnified and enhanced.
|
|
The researchers used sophisticated scanning and microscopic observations to study the tail.
|
|
A microscopic image of the globular shape produced by the graphite grains.
|
|
It eats microscopic organisms in the water, filtering it as it feeds.
|
|
Shifting between microscopic and macroscopic scales has some unintentionally humorous side effects.
|
|
A scanning electron microscopic (SEM) image of the rod-shaped Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
|
|
Instead, they suggest testing for microscopic amounts of blood in the stool.
|
|
A digitally colorized transmission electron microscopic (TEM) image of herpes virus particles.
|
|
We must not, however, demand too much of these microscopic systems prematurely.
|
|
The two share a conceptual approach, though — microscopic detail about personal frailty.
|
|
The other seasons get better represented with microscopic/macro footage, I guess.
|
|
Spores are the microscopic structures used by fungi to reproduce and spread.
|
|
The microscopic crab louse may be in decline, but it's hardly gone.
|
|
Image: YouTubeEverybody knows that the world is filled with creepy, microscopic parasites.
|
|
"Counting microscopic larvae by hand is an extremely slow process," Hozoji said.
|
|
This reinforces the importance of our microscopic companions for human well-being.
|
|
First, the more microscopic the memory the more readily we believe it.
|
|
Microscopic interest rates weren't enough to get low-income customers to save.
|
|
Once everything was plated, Mr. Fox made microscopic adjustments and stepped back.
|
|
These oddly cute microscopic animals are among the toughest creatures on Earth.
|
|
That squishy cleaning apparatus is a microscopic universe, teeming with countless bacteria.
|
|
The electricity split the rocks into microscopic grains of zircon and monazite.
|
|
Recovery or not, pay raises for middle-class Americans have been microscopic.
|
|
Think of them as microscopic mountains topped with a bit of ink.
|
|
Is life thus made up of countless such microscopic pieces of time?
|
|
Analyzed soil samples prove microscopic life is thriving among the extreme environment.
|
|
Lead can cause health problems, especially in children, even at microscopic levels.
|
|
Some experts doubted that microscopic fossils could have survived such a baking.
|
|
It loosens microscopic fibers of plastic, known as microplastics, from the garment.
|
|
She was getting into the method of looking at microscopic tooth textures.
|
|
JG: We know there are microscopic abrasions in the skin after shaving.
|
|
But it's microscopic critters called Cyanobacteria that make up blue-green algae.
|
|
As we reverse and take a microscopic view, we see reductionism at work.
|
|
Image: Gino Fornaciari/University of Pisa It's a microscopic case of mistaken identity.
|
|
The fine was microscopic by comparison with the latest fine levied against Google.
|
|
Right: This negative-stained transmission electron microscopic image shows the 1918 influenza virions.
|
|
In moths, this surface is also covered in microscopic, tapered columns or spikes.
|
|
There were continuous acts of tiny, microscopic acts of kindness that floored me.
|
|
On a fundamental level, Pardew simply does not give a miniscule, microscopic fuck.
|
|
Observe:All images and footage of microscopic coral via the Scripps Institution of Oceanography
|
|
From a physics standpoint, we're talking about microscopic particles suspended in liquid (colloids).
|
|
Villeneuve sent Konig photos of cuttlefish, squids, and various microscopic organisms for inspiration.
|
|
Snakes are carnivores and eels are, too; they consume microscopic creatures called plankton.
|
|
You flip a bunch of microscopic switches really fast and culture pours out.
|
|
Microscopic inspections revealed that the spiderlings were suckling milk droplets from epigastric furrows.
|
|
The microscopic bag is being sold for $258 and sold out almost instantly.
|
|
These microscopic plastics can be released when washing your nylon or polyester garments.
|
|
The rocks in each layer held fossilized shells of microscopic plankton called foraminifera.
|
|
The brain has been shipped to another facility for "microscopic evaluation," he said.
|
|
The answer refers to microscopic cells and the strands of genetic material within.
|
|
"Maybe on a microscopic level there is some minute benefit," De LaTour says.
|
|
Vesicles are microscopic globules within cells that contain tiny bits of biological material.
|
|
He knew that sometimes flecks like these turn out to be microscopic fossils.
|
|
Trilobites Thousands of years ago, two microscopic spores spawned and created a monster.
|
|
Your life-form can be big or small (even microscopic), realistic or fantastical.
|
|
The researchers ran microscopic and chemical analyses of the flake and its design.
|
|
Here, the microbial ecologist samples organic material that's potentially brimming with microscopic life.
|
|
This technique uses lasers to print microscopic images on ultra-thin nickel discs.
|
|
I look at microscopic views of plants, my own mouth, my pupils, my iris.
|
|
It's almost microscopic, but the testicle has all the capabilities of producing sperm normally.
|
|
These slimy microscopic blobs squirm up my nose while I swim in a lake.
|
|
Carbon-fiber composites are made out of nearly microscopic yet superstrong threads of carbon.
|
|
It makes astonishingly accurate predictions about the nature of the world at microscopic scales.
|
|
A microscopic photo of the breathable, waterproof layer on The North Face's Futurelight line.
|
|
Or what scientific discoveries can be gleaned from this microscopic view of Mario's goods?
|
|
As it turns out, some are also home to thriving groups of microscopic bacteria.
|
|
It was carrying tardigrades, microscopic critters that can live in extreme conditions — including space.
|
|
A colorized scanning electron microscopic image of plague bacteria, in yellow, on a flea.
|
|
"It's a small, small, microscopic blemish" on the identity of the franchise, Curry said.
|
|
So what do we know about this coronavirus so far, on a microscopic level?
|
|
Additional DNA, chemical and microscopic analysis confirmed that the spots were microbiological in origin.
|
|
Using a laser, he and his colleagues drilled seven microscopic holes into the bone.
|
|
The microscopic unit of measurement suggested by the title hardly represents the work's ambitions.
|
|
The area in question is a microscopic spot in the middle of the box.
|
|
Even the microscopic movements of atoms in the mirrors can create a false alarm.
|
|
As nature's microscopic zombies, viruses straddle the divide between the living and the dead.
|
|
You have people that could tell you, they can do microscopic analysis on these.
|
|
It's essentially so that no unwanted particles find their way into the microscopic components.
|
|
"With a cosmetic procedure, the injury is controlled and typically microscopic," Dr. Shah said.
|
|
The result is a global bout of sudden-death elimination at a microscopic level.
|
|
This Microscopic Footage Shows What Happens When A Jellyfish Stings YouCnidarians like anemones and jellyfish extend nematocysts, stinging organelles capable of shooting…Read more ReadWhen a man o' war stings, its long tentacles release thousands of microscopic venom-injecting capsules called nematocysts.
|
|
Instead they sprout more like mushrooms with microscopic nubs that support flat pedestals of ice.
|
|
In my case, what we say is I've managed it down to a microscopic level.
|
|
I wasn't taken out by a big animal; a microscopic organism had ended my adventure.
|
|
Will light-reactive bacteria ever power microscopic machines or become 3D-printed, living, functional bricks?
|
|
On a microscopic level, heat is simply atoms vibrating off one another, in constant motion.
|
|
Most combine two elements — one astronomic, the other microscopic — printed on separate, custom-cut supports.
|
|
These microscopic dust particles were traveling at high speed through space when Cassini detected them.
|
|
If life does exist elsewhere, Bowman said, it would most likely be primitive and microscopic.
|
|
This score reflects the concentration of dangerous microscopic pollutants, known as PM2.5, per cubic meter.
|
|
When this occurs, microscopic particles of human waste can then be propelled into the air.
|
|
These microscopic alterations are emblematic of Cesarco's linguistic labyrinths, which invite multiple lines of inquiry.
|
|
These coral rely on microscopic algae embedded in their tissue to produce food via photosynthesis.
|
|
The microscopic algae appears nearly every summer, but it's never been this bad, Norris said.
|
|
With or without swanky new solutions, the risks of meeting a toothy end are microscopic.
|
|
According to Herrera, its tentacles have stinging cells equipped with microscopic harpoons that inject venom.
|
|
You can see the footage it took, including a microscopic coral cage-match, right here.
|
|
Microscopic cross-sections extracted from the painting might also exist, exposing paint layers and pigments.
|
|
They lack the microscopic resolution of something like the Noble Audio Katana or Etymotic ER4SR.
|
|
Despite being microscopic in size, the structures are able to emit very bright, powerful light.
|
|
It's surgical and microscopic, yet grapples with nothing less than the passing of time itself.
|
|
Microscopic image of a sample taken from the woman's brain, with arrows indicating the amoebas.
|
|
Yes, but: Semiconductor manufacturing is technically challenging, with the processing done at a microscopic level.
|
|
You catch it by swallowing microscopic parasitic eggs, which hatch in y our intestinal tract.
|
|
In waterlogged soil, the microscopic spaces around the grains of sediment are filled with water.
|
|
PM 2.5, or fine particulate matter, is a mix of microscopic particles and liquid droplets.
|
|
To smell a truly disgusting odor, like spoiled milk, is on some microscopic level delicious.
|
|
Viruses, bacteria, fungi, and other germs are microscopic, so they can slip through borders undetected.
|
|
Microscopic eggs from Toxocara are shed in the animals' feces, contaminating yards, playgrounds and sandboxes.
|
|
The fungi had turned to stone in mineral-rich hot springs, preserved in microscopic detail.
|
|
At the moment, you can help by taking photographs of microscopic species or macroscopic arthropods.
|
|
Look hard enough and you'll see microscopic particles or tiny pieces of lint rolling around.
|
|
Nematodes are free-living, soil-dwelling microscopic worms, only about a millimeter when fully grown.
|
|
A microscopic view of SARS at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta.
|
|
Why, exactly, are we so dependent on microscopic pieces of calcium carbonate in our ears?
|
|
Microscopic images of coprolites (fossilized poop), including those from hyenas, wolves, and some unindentified species.
|
|
You're more likely to get an infection in places with microscopic breaks in the skin.
|
|
Little by little, the growing army eats away at the brain, causing telltale, microscopic spongy holes.
|
|
The microscopic details of a crew member's femur, as seen by confocal X-ray fluorescence imaging.
|
|
Perhaps best of all for value-conscious investors, its expense ratio is a microscopic 0.06 percent.
|
|
The larvae are microscopic, after all, so you can't exactly stick a tracking collar to them.
|
|
The reason is that the leaf's surface is covered with microscopic structures which contain air pockets.
|
|
Microscopic images show the macrophage immune cells (the colorful splotches) proliferating and working in cancerous cells.
|
|
But now, giving that microscopic, proto-human a good squeeze could prove a more accurate indicator.
|
|
Microscopic air bubbles trapped inside rock salt offer the oldest whiff of an oxygen-rich atmosphere.
|
|
A new laser printer can already do that by etching microscopic patterns onto sheets of plastic.
|
|
But NASA's Cassini spacecraft was able to nab a few microscopic grains with much stranger origins.
|
|
Adams has conducted fieldwork in Antarctica, studying how melting permafrost will impact the microscopic ecosystem there.
|
|
Here's stunning microscopic footage of the growth of silver and lead that's generated during metal displacement.
|
|
But common applications, such as the vibrating motor in your smartphone, only contain a microscopic amount.
|
|
At the microscopic scales where quantum mechanics rules, streams of matter particles can behave like waves.
|
|
So take time to show appreciation for these microscopic organisms' impact on your favorite aquatic creatures.
|
|
Doctors can use the device to create 3-D images of organs or expand microscopic images.
|
|
Made of microscopic droplets, they measure miles across and, collectively, cover most of the Earth's surface.
|
|
At first glance, the arancini were microscopic despite their gourmet price of 4.50 euro a piece.
|
|
On the microscopic scale, two harder surfaces that come into contact don't meet at many places.
|
|
CDs always felt so lifeless to me: blank discs etched with millions of invisible microscopic dots.
|
|
Now you know what it's like trying to find a virus on a greyscale microscopic image.
|
|
When towels stay wet for hours, they're more susceptible to housing mold and other microscopic bacteria.
|
|
But they seemed happy to stay on at Devolver, despite the publisher's focus on microscopic projects.
|
|
" This microscopic dust and soot typically comes from "automobile fumes, smog, soot, ash and construction dust.
|
|
But bread crumbs are not always the dry, microscopic shards familiar to us from cardboard tubes.
|
|
What if those other selves could get through the microscopic membrane separating their universes from ours?
|
|
Meet your microscopic roommates and hairy houseguests up close and personal in bug-tastic augmented reality.
|
|
Everyone on Earth is nothing but microscopic statistical fluctuations in the otherwise near-perfect featureless nothing.
|
|
The agony inevitably drives the victim to cooling water, where the female releases her microscopic larvae.
|
|
Instead the savior was a microscopic infectious virus for which the mighty aliens have no immunity.
|
|
These "foldscopes" can be attached to phones and used to photograph microscopic species and their behaviors.
|
|
Crafting the perfect plant-based meat alternative requires copying the original down to the microscopic level.
|
|
Its teams played before undersized crowds in oversize football stadiums, and television ratings were often microscopic.
|
|
The electron microscopic image, reveals the crown shape structural details for which the coronavirus was named.
|
|
The odds that this 37-year-old American is an agent of Western intelligence are microscopic.
|
|
While humans were busy domesticating dogs, the ice entrapped millions of microscopic organisms per square inch.
|
|
These microscopic sacs, which are attached to hair follicles, pump out oil to keep skin lubricated.
|
|
Polyps are transparent; it's the microscopic plants living inside them that give them their ruddy hue.
|
|
Over time, this can cause permanent "etching," or microscopic scratching, that makes the glass appear cloudy.
|
|
How does Mr. Waldstein help the reader visualize how the gloves work on a microscopic level?
|
|
They're much more like amoebas — single-celled microscopic sacs that move around by altering their shape.
|
|
Tal Danino grows various strains of bacteria into detailed, microscopic patterns that pull you in close.
|
|
Tourists know Vieques for its "biobay," a stretch of coastline that glows with microscopic plankton each night.
|
|
Phytoplankton are plant-like microscopic organisms that grow through photosynthesis, and they are prolific in Earth's oceans.
|
|
I always said I would only keep them microscopic, but I don't know — I have an itch.
|
|
In reality, lavish expenditures like seafood and workout machines typically represent a microscopic fraction of government spending.
|
|
Babesiosis is a rare disease caused by a microscopic parasite, Babesia microti, which infects red blood cells.
|
|
He became microscopic in his focus, convinced that Cornell and the police conspired to sabotage the investigation.
|
|
It may seem small, but like the best Survivor strategists, it's buried its microscopic hooks into everybody.
|
|
Intense resistance training can cause microscopic tears in your muscle fibers, leading to muscle damage and inflammation.
|
|
The beetle is so tiny that it is dwarfed by some unicellular organisms, which are usually microscopic.
|
|
Cold and flu viruses spread through microscopic spittle that fly when people cough, sneeze, or even talk.
|
|
Artist Chris Drury found microscopic soil bacteria known as Microcoleus vaginatus living in the Nevada Test Site.
|
|
Kicked up by the strong desert winds, microscopic particles from each of these sources fill the air.
|
|
It also spreads toxic chemicals up the food chain, from microscopic plankton all the way to humans.
|
|
And since microscopic lenses have shallow depth of field, they only allow a tiny sliver of focus.
|
|
But at the microscopic level, the core structure of tooth enamel hasn't changed much over the ages.
|
|
They are only observed via microscopic quantum phenomena, but once this happens, wavefunction interference then becomes apparent.
|
|
Potter delighted in painting fungi and during the 1890s she began creating microscopic drawings of fungus spores.
|
|
What's unknown, however, is whether or not he had an equally microscopic craft services truck on set.
|
|
Sample return missions, even those that are only capable of bringing back microscopic particles, are very expensive.
|
|
You can check out all of this year's finalists and other microscopic vids on Nikon's YouTube page.
|
|
A tiny game of Pac-Man set up by the scientists featuring real microscopic hunters and prey.
|
|
The microscopic examination of Nunez's life generated two further charges, which went to trial this past fall.
|
|
" The study by the EPA's National Center for Environmental Assessment focused on microscopic airborne pollutants called "particulates.
|
|
On a screen opposite him is an image captured by a microscopic camera inside the boy's eye.
|
|
Maybe those microscopic changes in bone make a crucial difference, but it is too soon to say.
|
|
That's because additive manufacturing generally works by putting down an object one microscopic layer at a time.
|
|
But rather than rely on a microscopic dot, I find it easier to utilize my Goldilocks sensibilities.
|
|
These microscopic organisms were a telltale sign that ocean water had drowned the area at some point.
|
|
See early anatomical illustrations, the first book of microscopic images and a volvelle chart predicting celestial events.
|
|
His final collection for the brand was filled with exaggerated '80s shoulders, big belts, and microscopic hemlines.
|
|
Covering surfaces with microscopic structures shaped like mushrooms, they find, keeps barnacles from getting a firm foothold.
|
|
When a macroscopic observer becomes entangled with a microscopic quantum system in a superposition, the world branches.
|
|
There are also some hand-drawn animations and a microscopic examination of what is likely corrugated cardboard.
|
|
It refers to the fringe around microscopic virus particles that have spiky edge resembling a royal crown.
|
|
Essentially, CPA found that, under the tariffs, U.S. GDP would decline by only a microscopic 6900 percent.
|
|
Such microscopic messages between muscles and other tissues may be jump-starting biochemical processes that improve health.
|
|
The air is thick, filled with microscopic particles of diamond dust and it smells kind of smoky.
|
|
Microscopic asbestos fibers can become trapped in our bodies, leading to deadly diseases years after original exposure.
|
|
Overman said they plan to do toxicology and metabolic testing among other microscopic studies before announcing findings.
|
|
The 15W motors generate microscopic bubbles and ultrasonic vibrations to knock off any dirt, grime, and oil.
|
|
This microscopic process mimics what should happen when we exercise strenuously, straining and then rebuilding our muscles.
|
|
To make matters worse, the ideological differences among these three — and the other four candidates — are microscopic.
|
|
Printed in microscopic text on one side is an archive of 1,000 different human languages used in 2016.
|
|
This advancement could be especially useful for viewing and characterizing molecules in biological samples and other microscopic systems.
|
|
It's unclear how the life, particularly the land-dwelling, microscopic tardigrade and a certain fungus, got down there.
|
|
With each press, these sensors measure microscopic changes in the distance between the cover glass and the backlight.
|
|
Image: Miri TrainicOur oceans are brimming with microscopic phytoplankton—plant-like organisms that contribute significantly to marine diversity.
|
|
A single microscopic difference: the addition of a small sabotage chip, and now you lose all your assurances.
|
|
The 30-year-old deGrom went 10-9 with a microscopic 1.70 ERA in 32 starts last season.
|
|
Dust mites, like Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus and Dermatophagoides farinae, are microscopic, eight-legged creatures that feed on skin cells.
|
|
But in space there's no moisture, oxygen, or microscopic creatures that can destroy what you're trying to preserve.
|
|
Quanterix uses a microscopic fluid-analysis device to detect a different protein that is released when neurons deteriorate.
|
|
Superhydrophobicity, as physicists call this effect, involves peppering a surface with microscopic structures that contain pockets of fluid.
|
|
Spruce pollen is made up of microscopic, double-lobed orbs that look a bit like Mickey Mouse heads.
|
|
Most microscopic animals need water to survive — otherwise, they can evaporate away if taken out of the water.
|
|
These microscopic creatures have more genes than some bacteria, but they're more closely related to viruses like smallpox.
|
|
Given their microscopic size and vast environmental niche, these creatures likely number in the trillions (if not more).
|
|
Researchers have suspected that synthetic textiles release microscopic fibers during the wash, but no definitive proof has existed.
|
|
And frankly I'm reluctant to recommend an e-reader because it maintains better detail on the microscopic level.
|
|
"Even when we think our eyes are perfectly still, we're still making microscopic eye movements," Martinez-Conde says.
|
|
If we engineered better phytoplankton — microscopic marine algae — perhaps our improved phytoplankton could survive with less mineral availability.
|
|
These microscopic plants float on the surface of the seas and produce much of the oxygen we breathe.
|
|
Microscopic plastic contamination is climbing in the Arctic, in some places increasing 20 times over the last decade.
|
|
The end result was an accurate simulation of the evolutionary process that play out at the microscopic level.
|
|
Yet, though a few multicellular animals do predate 575m years ago, all those discovered so far are microscopic.
|
|
Follow these ravishing rouge tips, and no one will think you just emerged from a microscopic clown car.
|
|
But thanks to the folks at Design I/O, your microscopic violin will finally produce actual sad music.
|
|
Cyclospora cayetanensis is a microscopic parasite that contaminates food or water and, when ingested, causes an intestinal illness.
|
|
Even the microscopic movements of atoms in the detector's mirrors can mimic the signal of a gravitational wave.
|
|
Cyclospora cayetanensis is a microscopic parasite that contaminates food or water, and when ingested, causes an intestinal illness.
|
|
Microscopic in size, they had come from an 212-year-old girl in southern Thailand, he was told.
|
|
It is a liquid that is injected into the eye with a microscopic needle during a surgical procedure.
|
|
While it may be difficult to wash off the microscopic parasite, the heat from cooking does kill it.
|
|
The walls of the exhibition are encircled with diaristic paintings of macro and microscopic views of his experiences.
|
|
Park sections off different chains of bacteria into a standoff of microscopic armies, comprised of billions of cells.
|
|
The town closest to the igloo is the microscopic Cantwell, which, Fisher says, has roughly 50 permanent residents.
|
|
Scientists worry about Phytoplankton, the microscopic organisms that are nearly ubiquitous in our oceans, like to eat iron.
|
|
This is an incredibly rigorous test requiring dozens of microscopic steps and minuscule signals transmitted throughout your brain.
|
|
It is caused by a new coronavirus, so named for the spiky protrusions that cover its microscopic surface.
|
|
Phys Ed Scientists are only now beginning to understand the many microscopic changes that occur when we exercise.
|
|
Haeckel was enlisted to visualize the expedition's sea creature findings, such as siphonophores, medusae (jellyfish), and microscopic radiolarians.
|
|
But "Westside"'s strength, we know from the start, is not in the macroscopic but in the microscopic.
|
|
Apart from the increased health risks from higher rates of microscopic airborne particulates, carbon emissions would rise, too.
|
|
The tiny samples were loaded with eosinophils, up to 100 of the cells per high-powered microscopic field.
|
|
These microscopic algae build their own armor by surrounding themselves with dozens of limestone, or calcium carbonate, scales.
|
|
The microscopic pores in the membranes allow water molecules through but leave salt and most other impurities behind.
|
|
Last week, scientists published a study revealing how densely packed your dirty kitchen sponge is with microscopic bacteria.
|
|
The rostrum is so sensitive that researchers say it can detect the movement of a single microscopic creature.
|
|
But no one will even be able to tell whether my microscopic man hips are swaying or not.
|
|
Bleaching occurs when the microscopic algae that live on the coral — and give them their spectacular color — leave.
|
|
If they lack in drama, they abundantly evidence Tolkien's microscopic attention to detail, visual rhythm, and complex ornament.
|
|
Newer versions of the endoscopy, using lasers, now allow doctors to look at living tissue on a microscopic level.
|
|
When foam and other types of plastic enter the environment, it slowly degrades into microscopic particles known as microplastics.
|
|
Microscopic image showing the inside of one of the diamonds found within a fragment of the Almahata Sitta meteorite.
|
|
"Past administrations have been more microscopic, while targeting people with violent crimes and sex assault crimes," the lawyer said.
|
|
As they explore, two of the men encounter a bulbous fungus that releases microscopic spores that enter their orifices.
|
|
The mold pig, well, looked like a microscopic pig and munched on fungus, which is how researchers named it.
|
|
The fungus, which develops as long filaments, breaks apart into microscopic spores and becomes airborne when soil is disturbed.
|
|
The introduction of even microscopic metal particles or other impurities can trigger a short-circuit, overheating and potential explosion.
|
|
But there are yet more complex ones like how exactly, on a microscopic level, snow melts in mid-air.
|
|
While that idea is intriguing, this is just one scenario for how microscopic aliens could be living on Enceladus.
|
|
First, a laser light source is directed towards the plants' leaves, which gets reflected by the embedded microscopic nanotubes.
|
|
The drug caused microscopic damage to the man's cones — cells in the retina that are responsible for color vision.
|
|
Microscopic magnetic particles from air pollution have been discovered in human brains, according to a study published on Monday.
|
|
This year's crop features a bioluminescent squid, a high-tech contact lens, and a microscopic 'brain' on a chip.
|
|
Bridgestone's Blizzak uses a combination of microscopic-sized gaps and studs to markedly improve handling and braking on ice.
|
|
In the presence of water, PHEMA becomes soft and conforms to the microscopic nooks and crannies of a surface.
|
|
From that screen's mercury glow, the operator can map out points to calculate the gun's geometry with microscopic fidelity.
|
|
Rivera stepped up his performance in the postseason with a microscopic 0.70 ERA and 42 saves in 96 appearances.
|
|
A microscopic image of the nano-crane's range of motion, with the blue and red indicating selected stop points.
|
|
I didn't "feel pregnant" and then "fall in love" with the microscopic worm nugget wreaking havoc in my uterus.
|
|
A new coding technique could make it possible to condense your entire digital library onto a microscopic hard drive.
|
|
In simple terms, metamaterials are specially engineered surfaces that have embedded microscopic structures and work as a single device.
|
|
Because many of these animal are small, even microscopic, PLab can have large numbers of them to test against.
|
|
AFP has a microscopic knowledge of congressional districts that only an annual budget of some $100 million can buy.
|
|
Luxturna is a liquid that is injected directly into the eye with a microscopic needle during a surgical procedure.
|
|
Still, in a department with 36,000 uniformed police officers, Officer Bukowski is part of subset that is virtually microscopic.
|
|
"I Contain Multitudes," his first book, covers a huge amount of microscopic territory in clear, strong, often epigrammatic prose.
|
|
In some cases, only a microscopic examination of the male genitalia or DNA analysis can provide a definitive identification.
|
|
Now, some of those same researchers have uncovered yet another flaw in the deepest guts of Intel's microscopic hardware.
|
|
It's the court for the men's hoops Final Four — which will apparently be played by microscopic college basketball players.
|
|
The final pattern you see below are the visible remnants of a complex microscopic battle between conflicting colored bacterias.
|
|
One is laser tweezers, which allow scientists to manipulate microscopic particles (often viruses and bacteria) within a laser beam.
|
|
He knows how to take a microscopic pause before a climactic chord, making it sound louder and more final.
|
|
Marine algae, microscopic plant-like organisms that are a form of phytoplankton, are usually not noticeable in normal concentrations.
|
|
Staples became intrigued by Smith's work around three years ago when he saw some clips of Smith's microscopic films.
|
|
Before reading this book, I didn't necessarily think a lot about life underground, from microscopic creatures to larger animals.
|
|
The film opens with an abstruse microscopic shot of a red liquid compound with strange black specks in it.
|
|
The fine print includes an acknowledgment that the plan would increase carbon emissions and rates of microscopic airborne particulates.
|
|
Being microscopic and blind, it's miraculous that a macrophage generally knows to eat pathogenic cells and not good ones.
|
|
In another installation, he rigged tornado machines to respond to microscopic movements, like gust from a closing gallery door.
|
|
Her newest exhibit, Community of Microbes, highlights eight invisible, microscopic communities in a wonderful celebration of color and science.
|
|
Hernandez is winless despite owning a microscopic 0.69 ERA and permitting only four hits over his first two outings.
|
|
As their microscopic structures deform, the fibers turn yellow, green and other shades, revealing the stresses and strains within.
|
|
The microscopic size of these grains — the biggest is only 30 micrometers across — make them challenging to study, however.
|
|
It is not barren: Scientists have spent decades studying the extreme environment and the microscopic life that survives there.
|
|
But shaken, stirred and dissolved in seawater are microscopic morsels of sugars and carbs, known as dissolved organic matter.
|
|
They built microscopic scaffolding into which they injected a mixture of two types of embryonic stem cells from mice.
|
|
This microscopic battle of the microbes may seem like part of another world, with little connection to human life.
|
|
Glotzer's team can reverse-engineer the shape of the microscopic building blocks that will assemble themselves into the desired form.
|
|
The Gemological Institute of America says inscribed diamonds have a microscopic number laser-inscripted on the girdle of the stone.
|
|
Scientists ruled out natural causes for the markings, such as an animal gnawing at the bones, by using microscopic techniques.
|
|
Cyclospora is a microscopic, single-celled organism that can be spread when people eat or drink something contaminated with feces.
|
|
The sensor is itself made up of other sensors, including microscopic crystal structures that become stressed due to accelerative forces.
|
|
"A change of 0.01 points is such a microscopic thing," said Nishimura, 70, who used to own an electronics shop.
|
|
"Life" could mean anything from microscopic blue cupcake-loving worms to sentient snorkels that like polka—not necessarily human-like.
|
|
The three most common culprits were the microscopic parasite Cryptosporidium (Crypto, if you're feeling friendly), Legionella, and Pseudomonas bacteria, respectively.
|
|
He explains the hefty robots are designed to mimic the movements of near-weightless, microscopic larvae along the California coast.
|
|
All you need is a smartphone and a handheld microscopic camera and you'll have an answer within minutes, Bloomberg reports.
|
|
These microscopic fungi extract energy from sugar using a process called fermentation, and produce alcohol and carbon dioxide as waste.
|
|
In an announcement Monday, Imperial said that the BioSolar Leaf technology purified air by using the photosynthesis of microscopic plants.
|
|
People can become infected by breathing in microscopic fungal spores made airborne by wind, construction, and other soil-disturbing activities.
|
|
Even tiny barnacles take in microscopic fragments of the stuff, which then move up the food chain, with unknown consequences.
|
|
FIAT CHRYSLER - RECALLING VEHICLES AS MICROSCOPIC CRACKS PRESENT IN EGR COOLER COULD, IN RARE CIRCUMSTANCES, POSE AN ENGINE FIRE RISK
|
|
These microscopic layers of deposits containing bacteria are known as biofilms and they are found on most surfaces and objects.
|
|
The animal's feet aren't actually sticky; they're covered in thousands of microscopic hairs that, together, act like a flexible adhesive.
|
|
Larvacean houses may also help to explain why microscopic particles of plastic have been discovered in the ocean's deepest depths.
|
|
Following a microscopic analysis, the team found a slow-growing carcinoid tumor in its digestive tract and diagnosed stomach cancer.
|
|
Dr. Green explains that, like a Fraxel, the Clear and Brilliant laser makes microscopic holes in the skin through heat.
|
|
This allows researchers to study moving microscopic objects from many angles, not just the original perspective captured by the microscope.
|
|
To put that in perspective, it would take these microscopic cars almost 37 million years to drive a single mile.
|
|
But when tip-toeing around on Giraglia island, these pads quickly become saturated by microscopic crystals flaking off the rocks.
|
|
Microscopic voids then build up in the solder beneath the transistors, causing parts to short-circuit or simply to overheat.
|
|
At the bottom of the world atop the forbidding Transantarctic Mountains sit the fossilized remains of microscopic, ocean-dwelling diatoms.
|
|
But if you've been pounding the streets all day, all those microscopic pollution particles will be glued to your skin.
|
|
"In humans, we cannot examine the brain in the same microscopic way you can do in animal studies," Hoekzema cautions.
|
|
Then, the rover will slowly rumble over to most promising places — places that could have once sustained hardy, microscopic life.
|
|
Kay's innate interest in the intersection of arts and science contributed to the orchestration of a video documenting microscopic collisions.
|
|
The movie was the first feature from Nietzchka Keene, who worked on microscopic budgets, often incorporating mythological or supernatural elements.
|
|
Some pieces are set aside for microscopic evaluation, and go into formalin solution that stops them in time from degrading.
|
|
There Trump stood overly engorged with unsightly veins popping out and one very specific area made to be basically microscopic.
|
|
Our genetic information — everything that makes us who we are — is stored within the microscopic chemical structure of DNA molecules.
|
|
The microscopic structures of the leg bones also indicated that they were already bearing weight, adding evidence to the argument.
|
|
Jellies are opportunistic feeders, meaning they'll ingest just about anything: microscopic plankton, crustaceans, and fish larvae are all fair game.
|
|
However, it's not the coral itself that creates the brilliant hues, but colorful microscopic algae that live within the coral.
|
|
These microscopic organisms played a key role in creating a habitable atmosphere for more advanced lifeforms billions of years ago.
|
|
Think of a window screen, and you have an approximation of what this chip looked like at the microscopic level.
|
|
The microscopic fungus provides protein and, during mating, a fly's brain circuitry can be altered to make them crave it.
|
|
The researchers used used single-crystal X-ray diffraction diamond anvil cells, which captures the intricate, microscopic structures of crystals.
|
|
Here, Rockman gathers characters that have transformed the Great Lakes region, from microscopic bacteria to the invasive Tree-of-Heaven.
|
|
The photographs feature real subjects — mucous, cuticles, newspaper clippings — often captured at microscopic levels to create a fossilized, distorted effect.
|
|
It was a huge political story, and, as a result, it was Sanders who came under microscopic scrutiny, not Biden.
|
|
A study published in Science on Wednesday now presents a microscopic picture of the biology that makes corals' skeletons grow.
|
|
What they do according to O*NET: Prepare histologic slides from tissue sections for microscopic examination and diagnosis by pathologists.
|
|
The rooms are practically microscopic, which is not so surprising in New York, but it is for the price tag.
|
|
In a society hopeless and cruel, the particular and the microscopic were the only things that could still prove reliable.
|
|
They spotted microscopic organisms from the ocean in the sediment, similar to those found in soil after the 1998 tsunami.
|
|
So various "platforms" are being tried, such as folding them into larger shapes or chemically gluing them onto microscopic beads.
|
|
North Atlantic right whales, which can weigh as much as the space shuttle, exclusively eat nearly microscopic creatures called zooplankton.
|
|
Although there are speculations in this direction, so far we don't have a solid microscopic understanding of black hole physics.
|
|
Together, these techniques allowed the researchers to study the fine structures at microscopic scales and to peer inside the fossils themselves.
|
|
Snowflakes are born high up in the atmosphere when water vapor condenses and forms ice crystals around microscopic dust or pollen.
|
|
Once the vapor hits a silicon or stainless steel tray, it creates a "diamond film" containing microscopic diamonds free of impurities.
|
|
A tiny, microscopic part of us just wishes she would have worn one of those glitter swimming caps with her gown!
|
|
Even though they're microscopic in size, the nanodiamonds are capable of producing a signal that we can detect here on Earth.
|
|
"Everything we do, every choice we make, it seems, leaves a mark on the microscopic world that surrounds us," Panagiotou said.
|
|
For every part I remove and microscopic cable I pull, the more I feel like I'm very badly fucking everything up.
|
|
Arthur Ashkin invented the "optical tweezers," highly focused beams of light that allow you to manipulate microscopic objects and living organisms.
|
|
The addition of a microscopic lens, to focus the laser light even further, generates a pull force to oppose the push.
|
|
Trilobites After Entomophthora muscae fatally infects house flies, it makes microscopic stalks for hurtling spores at other insects that come nearby.
|
|
Why would I waste my time worrying about some microscopic germs when I could put that time into changing the world.
|
|
Now, a new microscopic 3D printing technique could provide greater transparency and higher sensitivity than the existing state-of-the-art.
|
|
They validated the measurements of the adults' brain activities with scans of the microscopic structure of adult post-mortem brain tissue.
|
|
"Insects are like jungles at the microscopic level—they can carry hundreds of species of microorganisms inside of them," Madden said.
|
|
Either bacteria, or tardigrades (a microscopic, water-dwelling animal); they can survive harsh conditions in space and arrive right to us.
|
|
Thanks to lots of new research about their importance to our bodies, they're not really seen as soulless microscopic murderers anymore.
|
|
New research shows that as many as 700,000 microscopic fibers are released into the environment each time we do the laundry.
|
|
The plasmonic image measures just over half an inch across—large compared to previous microscopic images created using the same technique.
|
|
The process involves studying microscopic images of the shoes and using a specialized vacuum to attach up to thousands of sequins.
|
|
But microscopic versions of those are also in development, so putting them together is just a matter of time and effort.
|
|
In theory, given the microscopic margin of Mr Imamoglu's victory, no one denies AK had a right to demand a recount.
|
|
One of Opportunity's first big finds, in April 2004 was small, round "spherules," photographed by its microscopic imager near Fram Crater.
|
|
Scientists, in fact, have produced temperatures many times that, right here on Earth (in terms of kinetic energy in microscopic places).
|
|
So the vapor precipitates out by clinging to microscopic particles in the air, such as sodium or calcium, and forming crystals.
|
|
The bits of eggshell, which came as a surprise to the paleontologists, were detected inside the bird's abdomen following microscopic examination.
|
|
According to CNET, those devices are unique because they have microscopic molecules that emit light when illuminated by an LED backlight.
|
|
In other words, every urban environment, from Berlin to Tokyo, could be home to its own special community of microscopic critters.
|
|
As the C. botulinum bacteria grow, they create eight types of neurotoxins that are so deadly, even microscopic amounts can kill.
|
|
THE horizontal boring machine at the nuclear Advanced Manufacturing Research Centre (AMRC) in Sheffield cuts large steel components with microscopic precision.
|
|
Bone histology, or the study of the microscopic structure of tissues within the bones, revealed this detail, according to the report.
|
|
Instead, Dr. Banfield said she expected new branches to be discovered for eukaryotes, especially for tiny species such as microscopic fungi.
|
|
Microscopic ice grains had also been observed on its surface, a result of water vapor being ejected from inside the comet.
|
|
The monthly employment report falls short in providing the microscopic, high-resolution view of the labor market that economists yearn for.
|
|
Diagnosis male infertility Semen analysis is the microscopic examination of a man's ejaculate, according to the American Society for Reproductive Medicine.
|
|
In these nurseries, the larval fish, including species like swordfish and mahi mahi, are outnumbered by microscopic plastics seven to one.
|
|
The women in the two studies had stages IA2 and IB1 cervical cancer, meaning their tumors were small - and possibly microscopic.
|
|
The microscopic world is full of beautiful wonders, and this inexpensive paper microscope kit is the perfect tool to discover them.
|
|
Macro videographer Roman De Giuli's latest video, Radiolarians, showcases similar organic patterns created by ink decomposing into thousands of microscopic dots.
|
|
Ms. Warren's failure to finish in the top two in any Super Tuesday state left her with microscopic chances of success.
|
|
The device records images of microscopic snowflakes as they pass through the light beam and cast a shadow on a detector.
|
|
It kind of make sense that God wouldn't be one great huge entity, but actually billions and billions of microscopic ones.
|
|
More than half of all cases have occurred in Texas and Florida, where the microscopic organisms thrive in warm pond water.
|
|
To the coach, even something as microscopic as emphasizing the proper syllable in a scout-team drill was worth doing correctly.
|
|
Clostridium botulinum produces a neurotoxin that, even in microscopic amounts, can lead to symptoms like double vision, difficulty breathing, and paralysis.
|
|
From microscopic plankton to sea horses, anemones and sharks, little survives inside the 21970- to 245-foot radius of an explosion.
|
|
There was a huge drop in the production of microscopic algae that feed a range of animals, from shrimp to whales.
|
|
Essentially, they coat a conductive surface, such as copper, with microscopic columns of graphite, around which they place particles of silicon.
|
|
Acfer 049 preserved tiny pockets that once contained the ice before it melted and researchers call these microscopic holes ice fossils.
|
|
In a blog post, MIT describes the material as being made from vertically aligned carbon nanotubes, which are microscopic carbon filaments.
|
|
It is used by not just starfish larvae, but countless billions of other microscopic invertebrates that filter food from the oceans.
|
|
I finally found the microscopic pictures I needed to find the exact species in a paper written in German in 1928.
|
|
Matter They are microscopic artwork: tiny tubes and long filaments, strange squiggles etched into some of the most ancient rocks known.
|
|
The other two, Kamikaze Ground Crew and the Microscopic Septet (also known as the Micros), were founded in the early 1980s.
|
|
The dirt, oil, and microscopic particles lurking within come out and could pass into the open pores of the other bathers.
|
|
Among the 33 outbreaks with a confirmed infectious etiology, most (58 percent) were cryptosporidium, a diarrheal disease caused by microscopic parasites.
|
|
Taking control of everything from the cosmic to the microscopic, the natural to the manufactured, and going on a metamorphic joyride.
|
|
On the one hand, these microscopic organisms are impossibly cute, seeming like tiny blimps that bumble around harmlessly on their stubby legs.
|
|
Their cells contain microscopic amounts of phytochrome, a wondrous, light-sensitive pigment that actually enables plants to reckon the length of daylight.
|
|
Instead of a mountain of slices from the city's finest eateries, they were handed cold, microscopic slivers on hors d'oeuvres-sized plates.
|
|
Cyclosporiasis is caused by a microscopic parasite called Cyclospora cayetanensis and can cause diarrhea, cramps, bloating, and other common stomach-bug symptoms.
|
|
Bacteria consume sugar and, as a byproduct, produce acids which dissolve mineral out of the teeth, leaving microscopic holes we can't see.
|
|
Understanding the inner workings of microbial communities that can involve hundreds or thousands of microscopic species, however, poses a far greater challenge.
|
|
The 27.4-year-old deGrom went 26.3-227 with a microscopic 24 ERA in 29 starts last season while making $25.54 million.
|
|
Leung bases her views on a microscopic research of her portfolio of companies, leveraging her experience as a former private equity investor.
|
|
By persuading the right microbes to grow under the right condition, we unearthed medicinal chemistry that beat back our own microscopic enemies.
|
|
Dash's work employs the use of a scanning electron microscope, which is able to photograph details too microscopic for the naked eye.
|
|
His current obsession is photographing flowers in microscopic detail; the samples in his office are radiantly beautiful, resembling richly colored abstract paintings.
|
|
Think of it as a smart microscopic wire: When it's illuminated it allows electrons to flow, when it's dark nothing passes through.
|
|
Carbon nanotubes have been an exciting prospect in material science for years now: At the microscopic level, they're super strong and stretchy.
|
|
Those findings—which also detected microscopic pharmacies inside each fish—prompted the EPA to expand its research to more than 150 locations.
|
|
Microscopic lenses have a tiny depth of field, which means they can only bring one tiny spot into focus at a time.
|
|
Through the act of weaving the artist has transformed wire — an industrial material — into a cellular structure, something both microscopic and organic.
|
|
The trillions upon trillions of microscopic single-celled organisms at home in Centralia's soil suddenly found themselves living in a veritable sauna.
|
|
"In a society hopeless and cruel, the particular and the microscopic were the only things that could still prove reliable," he writes.
|
|
Specialists searched in vain for microscopic tumors and puzzled over Kamni's spinal fluid, which didn't harbor any trace of common brain diseases.
|
|
His microscopic attention to life's everyday details is a celebration of our many trivialities as much as our constant state of uncertainty.
|
|
The effect comes from more than a million microscopic lenses, each sitting atop a precisely printed image thinner than a human hair.
|
|
Tuberculosis is primarily an airborne disease spread through microscopic droplets that accompany everyday actions such as speaking, sneezing, coughing, laughing or singing.
|
|
Canadian photographer Waldo Nell has captured the underlying microscopic structure behind those stunning hues in extraordinary detail in his latest photographic series.
|
|
Inhaling or ingesting these microscopic fibers is what can lead to serious health conditions later in life such as asbestosis and mesothelioma.
|
|
A human being is created in the long journey from being a single, microscopic cell to becoming a self-conscious moral agent.
|
|
Trilobites You don't just have teeth in your mouth: You have around 32 fossils that tell a microscopic history of your health.
|
|
First-person shooters are the Subway sandwich of the game design world, reliable and standardized, and yet infinitely augmentable in microscopic ways.
|
|
Like it or not, you are already in a committed relationship with a microscopic community living on and in you: your microbiome.
|
|
" For Levitch, maybe the best part was meeting Mark Thomas from The Pay-Phone Project, a "microscopic appreciator and flaneur of phones.
|
|
Metamaterials are essentially specially engineered surfaces with microscopic structures — in this case, tunable antennas — embedded in them, working as a single device.
|
|
Outbreaks of cyclosporiasis in the United States have been linked to imported fresh produce contaminated with a microscopic parasite called Cyclospora cayetanensis.
|
|
I thought, pollen is also an object, so this is one of the first catalogs where you see microscopic pictures of pollen.
|
|
The probe-based technology essentially allows doctors to examine live tissue at a microscopic level inside the body and in real time.
|
|
That's to say nothing of the complex computer chips whose microscopic features are far too tiny for any 3D printer to reproduce.
|
|
There, a state-of-the-art nine-ton milling machine operated by a single engineer creates complex cases and produces microscopic components.
|
|
But rest assured: When scientists thawed the tardigrades in 2014, the microscopic animals did not seek vengeance upon humanity for their imprisonment.
|
|
In 2013, the F.B.I. reported that testimony asserting that microscopic hair comparison could produce a "match" between two hairs was scientifically invalid.
|
|
It might well turn out that microscopic phytoplankton matter far more to this kind of healthy biosphere than our beloved polar bears.
|
|
Prompted in part by that report, the Justice Department initiated a review of thousands of cases involving microscopic matching of hair samples.
|
|
"It was utterly shocking to be informed that I tested positive for a microscopic amount of a tainted substance," Schmidt, 27, said.
|
|
Saints' robes and soldiers' uniforms are trimmed with buttons and embroidery, and there are nearly microscopic representations of jewelry and rosary beads.
|
|
During his 1988 campaign, George Bush was sensitive to the "microscopic probing" his children were facing, particularly as the election drew near.
|
|
Embedded in the figurine's polymer matrix are trillions of microscopic glass beads, each one enclosing a few dozen molecules of synthetic DNA.
|
|
And with the constant advancements in technology, you can only imagine how awe-inspiring the microscopic images of the future will be.
|
|
Microscopic pieces of the precious metal – known as nanoparticles – were encased in a chemical device and used to accelerate other chemical reactions.
|
|
For example, it can affect the timing of blooms of phytoplankton, the microscopic organisms at the bottom of the ocean food chain.
|
|
This triple bill features three flagship ensembles from Manhattan's 2212s downtown scene: the Microscopic Septet, the Jazz Passengers and Kamikaze Ground Crew.
|
|
The grenade's exterior coating contained up to 50 percent asbestos, which can spread microscopic fibers that pose serious health dangers if inhaled.
|
|
Rocha Pitta's version of nature is immortal and quick, operating on the microscopic and macroscopic levels to reclaim land lost to humanity.
|
|
I think people need to change their razors frequently, and remember that when you're shaving you're introducing microscopic nicks to the skin.
|
|
Microscopic analysis of the bone revealed that the markings were created by stone tools, probably a short time after the skulls' owners died.
|
|
This crumb of biomaterial would serve to fertilize the nearby neural tissue, enticing microscopic arms from local cells to unfurl into the cone.
|
|
There are stories about broken or cruel families, niche narratives hand-animated by microscopic teams, and surreal parables about humanity's relationship with technology.
|
|
Microscopic image of synthetic human prions accumulating in the brain of a mouse that was genetically altered to produce a certain human protein.
|
|
Most are found in super-alkaline lakes throughout Africa's Great Rift Valley, which host immense blooms of microscopic blue-green algae (called cyanobacteria).
|
|
Malaysian police revealed Friday that Kim Jong Nam's body contained traces of VX, a colorless, odorless, tasteless liquid that's deadly in microscopic amounts.
|
|
Traditional approaches to quantum gravity, such as perturbative string theory, try to find a fully consistent microscopic description of all particles and forces.
|
|
One such sample contains a microscopic single-cell organism which the team's head scientist (Ariyon Bakare) manages to rouse from millennia of dormancy.
|
|
These commanding portraits weave together yarn, thread, microscopic shimmer, pearls, fabric, canvas, and vinyl, producing simultaneously chaotic and organized depictions of human forms.
|
|
In 2012, Coffey and his colleagues first showed through microscopic analyses that the fold of membrane was, in fact, a single connected structure.
|
|
Feature By studying the microscopic bacteria that bloom on our bodies after we die, scientists hope to unlock surprising mysteries of the departed.
|
|
After many such bites, the larvae develop into thin microscopic worms which invade the host's lymphatic system, where they grow into adult worms.
|
|
But I think [it] made investors forget the risks of capital loss only for the reward of a yield that is pretty microscopic.
|
|
There are thousands of little pieces of who knows what clogging up our orbital neighborhood, ranging in size from microscopic to potentially catastrophic.
|
|
To fix this, researchers led by MIT's Jeehwan Kim, used crystalline forms of silicon and germanium that resemble lattices at the microscopic level.
|
|
The idea of microscopic computers floating around the air every waking moment is a privacy nightmare only Mark Zuckerberg could get excited about.
|
|
Made with a foam layer, the footbed features microscopic air bubbles that cushion your feet and provide moderate arch support for maximum comfort.
|
|
Dyson says the Pure Cool purifier is now capable of eliminating 99.97 percent of microscopic allergens and pollutants as small as 4993 microns.
|
|
I have some sympathy for Android phone makers, who are faced with microscopic profit margins and a shortage of their own software expertise.
|
|
These microscopic marks can reveal what activity a tool was for, whether to weave cloth or baskets — or, perhaps, to poke the epidermis.
|
|
The tests they relied on, such as advanced diffusion MRI, instead look for microscopic changes in the structure or volume of the brain.
|
|
The researchers created microscopic rods out of goethite, a key mineral component of rust, and reacted them with water dissolved with iron atoms.
|
|
Plaintiffs claimed the physical exfoliant created microscopic tears in their skin, leaving it vulnerable to bacteria and causing long-term damage and sensitivity.
|
|
Comet dust particles were collected in NASA's Stardust mission, and microscopic asteroid particles were collected from the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency's Hayabusa probe.
|
|
Qui-Gon tells us that midi-chlorians are little, microscopic life forms, living inside of cells that are the conduit for the Force.
|
|
Researchers at Caltech have created microscopic robots out of DNA that can transport and sort cargo, according to research published Thursday in Science.
|
|
"The doctors told us it could be a microscopic hole that it could come into and still spread like that," Cassey told WAFF.
|
|
But it wasn't clear how much good investing a modest amount in a massive fund with a microscopic piece of Juul would do.
|
|
This is a state of extreme hibernation that many microscopic creatures use to survive difficult environments, such as those lacking water or air.
|
|
Hepatitis A spreads by fecal matter—even in microscopic amounts—so those who lack access to proper sanitation are the most at risk.
|
|
Laser-perforated numbers eliminate the need for numbers applied to the material, which can be cumbersome even by the most microscopic of measurements.
|
|
Rolison and her team at the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory developed a battery that relies on microscopic sponge-like structures made of zinc.
|
|
An autopsy did not find anything unusual with Paddock&aposs physical condition, even after a microscopic brain examination by experts at Stanford University.
|
|
It may be years before you have microscopic, ultrasound-powered doodads swimming around inside you, but that future is well on its way.
|
|
To celebrate that microscopic mastery, the Nikon Small World contest has awarded the best photographs taken through a microscope each year for decades.
|
|
A technology called adaptive optics allowed doctors to view the damage on a cellular level and see the microscopic structures in her eyes.
|
|
Kraepelin's lasting influence can be felt in the way Kandel reduces these mental conditions chiefly to microscopic causative factors in the nervous system.
|
|
There, they serve shiboritate, or freshly pressed sake, and orizake, a pre-pressed sake still cloudy and creamy with microscopic particles of rice.
|
|
Or, she thinks they could be fashioned into liquid lenses for a microscopic camera that change their focus by morphing in real time.
|
|
Hepatitis A spreads by fecal matter — even in microscopic amounts — so those who lack access to proper sanitation are the most at risk.
|
|
Recent data suggest that four other Indian cities have higher average levels of PM2.5, microscopic airborne particulates that are especially harmful to humans.
|
|
Studies using CT scans, chemical analyses and new microscopic techniques have also illuminated the behavior, evolution and sensory abilities of T. rex itself.
|
|
It involves adding a new, microscopic layer of silicon to solar cells, increasing their ability to gather sunlight and convert it into electricity.
|
|
Salibian also reports that the donation allowed for the department to buy a microscopic image acquisition system which is worth about €100,000 ($112,856.00).
|
|
If the body is well rested, Fleisig said, those microscopic ligament tears heal and the surrounding muscles help carry the load of pitching.
|
|
Latos sported a microscopic 0.74 ERA after winning his first four starts, but he has surrendered eight homers over his last six turns.
|
|
By making tiny things giant, Dr. Hecksher and her students produced observations and measurements that couldn't easily be made at the microscopic level.
|
|
Using virtual reality, scientists at the National Institute of Health have blown up microscopic flu viruses to 200 million times their actual size.
|
|
The team also reported finding a few more ticks in amber, including two that were covered in microscopic hairs belonging to a beetle.
|
|
Surgery is followed by chemotherapy to attack microscopic cancer cells that are left behind in the pancreas or are hiding in other organs.
|
|
The laws of thermodynamics turn out to be descriptions of the most statistically likely configurations to happen from the microscopic point of view.
|
|
Then in the second half of the film, the camera zooms in and delves into the smallest structures, uncovering more and more microscopic details.
|
|
The researchers constructed microscopic tower structures in the cell which helped guide and release the bubbles, according to the new paper in Nature Communications.
|
|
A forest of microscopic life What the sea ice melt does to the ecosystem, and to us, is at the heart of this study.
|
|
Still, details like the ThinkPad's half-size Backspace key and microscopic Windows and Backslash keys remind you that there was still room for improvement.
|
|
The interesting, rather sleek pieces of display technology rely on microscopic etchings in transparent glass lenses that catch light being projected into their edges.
|
|
"You need a microscopic amount to kill one person, which is what happened to Kim Jong Nam," said Bretton-Gordon, the chemical weapons expert.
|
|
The system can do little about plastic that has fragmented into microscopic particles, but these make up just 8% of plastic in the gyre.
|
|
The fungal fuzz forms quickly, launching spores as if from microscopic cannons to attack healthy flies that get too close to the dying insect.
|
|
It's made out of squishy, microscopic, chemical balls that are packed together in mineral oil, according to their new study published in Science Advances.
|
|
When a toilet is flushed with the lid open, this causes "toilet plume" and microscopic particles of human waste are propelled into the air.
|
|
These microscopic crystals, invisible to the naked eye, look like forests full of towering trees spouting up from nothing when magnified hundreds of times.
|
|
It is, however, ideal for making relaxing videos when filmed at the microscopic level, and that's exactly what most of us need right now.
|
|
If Johnny uses the bathroom but doesn't wash well and then digs into the potato salad, he's leaving microscopic nasties in everyone else's meal.
|
|
It happens — and defenders of the theory will always trot out isolated instances — but on such a microscopic level as to be entirely meaningless.
|
|
And after ten months, my tumors have shrunk to the point where they're a microscopic size so you can't see them on a scan.
|
|
Researchers from Yale University have found that their microscopic structure could be used to gather ultra-fine dust that's otherwise devilishly hard to capture.
|
|
They also completed a CT scan of the tiny creature—the first time the technique has been used on a microscopic soft-bodied specimen.
|
|
The researchers found that washing 13 pounds (6 kg) of polyester-cotton blend fabrics released (on average) nearly 138,000 individual strands of microscopic fibers.
|
|
Things stick together thanks to a combination of various microscopic and macroscopic behaviors, influenced by interactions between individual molecules and the shapes of surfaces.
|
|
If these individuals represent a trillion or so species, that means very little is known about Earth's microscopic denizens, Lennon said in the statement.
|
|
Your skin is a shield against the microscopic invaders that thrive in lakes and oceans and also take to hot tubs and swimming pools.
|
|
She found cholera bacteria was often associated with the presence of zooplankton, the microscopic creatures found in lakes, rivers and ocean In this Oct.
|
|
But making these images is no small feat: Each one is actually a composite of more than 8,000 photos shot with a microscopic lens.
|
|
Recent studies have shown that puffing on e-cigarettes increases concentration of these microscopic pollutants — in particular, PM2.5 and ultrafine particles — in indoor environments.
|
|
MAN HAS 4 LIMBS AMPUTATED AFTER DOG LICK LEADS TO SEVERE INFECTION, REPORT SAYS Cyclospora is an intestinal illness caused by a microscopic parasite.
|
|
Now imagine a microscopic version of that and you've got yourself a proteasome, one of the most essential molecular machines inside the human body.
|
|
Offensively, Okafor's usage rate is microscopic but he's hitting shots, doesn't turn it over, and has never been more efficient in his entire career.
|
|
Moreover, Unruh's theoretical studies suggest that fluids with diverse microscopic properties will still be smooth on macro scales and emit featureless, thermal Hawking radiation.
|
|
I thought I would continue in this blissful, tired-but-happy state, until I hit something in the microscopic world that gave me pause.
|
|
Examining violence toward black communities in the past week, or the past century, through a microscopic focus on police brutality alone is a mistake.
|
|
The spider pushes the liquid through long ducts and it comes out through microscopic spigots on the SPINNERETs at the rear of the abdomen.
|
|
All intelligence, counterintelligence and law enforcement officials should provide a microscopic focus on the pattern of potentially escalating attacks against leading Democratic presidential candidates.
|
|
A poll commissioned by Open Russia resulted in a tie, with each candidate shown to have a microscopic 2 percent support from the voters.
|
|
Tiny, even microscopic probes would suffice to gather all the data needed about the planet and its volatile inhabitants without anyone being the wiser.
|
|
A horde of microscopic critters called tardigrades were passengers aboard the Israeli spacecraft Beresheet, which crashed into the lunar surface nearly four months ago.
|
|
Wood veneer trims were aged at least 10 years and have been precisely processed with digital technology and microscopic checks, according to the automaker.
|
|
A display features Vantablack, which absorbs 22014 per cent of light, and has to be grown on surfaces as a crop of microscopic nanorods.
|
|
Yet it was true, if you understood beauty to encompass not only ecstasy but precision, rigor, a relish for the tiniest (literally microscopic) details.
|
|
It's a nanobiological weapon — a microscopic protein shell holding a few genes that hijack a cell's internal machinery, forcing it to make new viruses.
|
|
He titled the book after Darwin's On The Origin of Species, and even illustrated what looks like a rendition of a microscopic bacterial portrait.
|
|
The ecology of a landscape is what exists below the spectacle, on the microscopic level, or even in plain sight, but obscured through time.
|
|
Even with the most sophisticated cutting-edge artificial intelligence, we're nowhere near being able to simulate the brain of a teeny-tiny microscopic worm.
|
|
Today, astrobiologists suspect that extraterrestrial lifeforms are likely to be microscopic in nature, akin to the bacteria scientists find in extreme environments on Earth.
|
|
But the smaller the gates, the less power they take, and microscopic savings add up quickly when you're talking billions and trillions of them.
|
|
The same light pressure that sweeps from a comet's tail, he figured, could be used in the lab to push a microscopic ball around.
|
|
It was Dr. Michalakis who mentioned the microscopic creatures known as tardigrades as something striking that one might encounter in the movie's Quantum Realm.
|
|
Instead of framing his images as scientific evidence, Strüwe used his designer's eye for composition and pattern to highlight the microscopic world's staggering artistry.
|
|
For decades researchers have argued that some of the skin's microscopic residents are partly to blame for certain disorders, such as acne and eczema.
|
|
She is held up by producers and the entertainment news media as refreshing, long overdue evidence that Hollywood's insistence on microscopic waistlines is ending.
|
|
It's called the MoonArk, and it's carrying thousands of microscopic Earth artifacts from songs to language to scents and samples of plants and plankton.
|
|
One of the blades has microscopic serrations, and the silicone handle cushions can be removed, and the blades can be separated, for cleaning purposes.
|
|
So if things are floating into the ear, mostly microscopic particles, it&aposs gonna trap them, and then it&aposs gonna be shed out.
|
|
Some of the animals include corals, sponges, sea anemones, jellyfish, comb jellies, arthropods and tiny invertebrates called mud dragons, as well as microscopic fossils.
|
|
The eruption also unexpectedly coincided with an explosion in the population of phytoplankton, a diverse array of sea surface-dwelling, sunlight-drinking microscopic organisms.
|
|
If left for too long, the microscopic life within the folds of our bed sheets can even make us sick, Tierno told Business Insider.
|
|
Ashkin's work was based on the realization that the pressure of a beam of light could push microscopic objects and trap them in position.
|
|
Besides evoking the reaction-diffusion images made by researchers, Kitahara's video also has the look of microscopic organisms or even theoretical silicon-based lifeforms.
|
|
Related: An Artist Is Turning Spit into Crystals Stunning Micro-Crystals Are Nature's Stained Glass Mosaics Creating The Microscopic Art Of Jon Hopkins' Immunity
|
|
"Finally, more recent studies suggest that plastics may harbor pathogens and introduce disease to wildlife that is immunologically unprepared for this microscopic onslaught," he said.
|
|
Each tentacle has millions of microscopic hooks filled with venom, and the jellyfish carries enough venom to kill more than 60 humans, the university said.
|
|
Under the microscope the frozen clues within come to life -- a kaleidoscope of sea ice algae and phytoplankton, microscopic organisms that use sunlight for energy.
|
|
But as we've reported previously, these specimens can preserve tiny microscopic and three-dimensional details in ways that traditional fossils might not be able to.
|
|
Although Diamond Foundry stones start with a small sliver of natural Canadian diamond, that's just a microscopic base upon which the new layers are formed.
|
|
The microscopic PM2.5 particles are especially dangerous -- they're so small they can lodge deep into the lungs and pass into other organs and the bloodstream.
|
|
Sony accomplishes the seamless illusion by using RGB emissive display tech—the display is built of nearly microscopic LEDs that glow red, green or blue.
|
|
Preexisting scanning techniques have been used to detect and track cancer in living animals before, but not with this level of clarity and microscopic detail.
|
|
This microscopic image shows the lumpy calcium-aluminum-silicate-hydrate (C-A-S-H) binder material that forms when volcanic ash, lime and seawater mix.
|
|
DTI measures water diffusion in the brain, particularly in white matter, to see if the structure of the brain at the microscopic level is disrupted.
|
|
More likely it will just break into smaller and smaller toxic bits, which (despite being microscopic) are getting harder and harder for us to ignore.
|
|
Maybe the world would have more aspiring chemists if classes were instead taught using these microscopic videos of chemical reactions happening right before your eyes.
|
|
Each of these three broad spectrums gets directed towards its own microchip, which is covered in millions of incredibly small mirrors attached to microscopic hinges.
|
|
In the 1960s, it took microscopic inspection to discover differences between the moderate liberalism of John F. Kennedy and the moderate conservatism of Richard Nixon.
|
|
Unlike most presidential candidates, when the wily Vermont Senator announced his presidential bid, he never thought in the microscopic terms of White House or bust.
|
|
Last week, the CDC published a report looking at the recent trend of outbreaks caused by Crypto, more formally known as the microscopic protozoan Cryptosporidium.
|
|
Scientists commonly turn their inquisitive gaze to mundane restaurant items that may appear harmless but are in fact crawling with microscopic and potentially harmful lifeforms.
|
|
There's something about watching the world's tiniest things up close that can blow your mind, and there's no better example of this than microscopic film.
|
|
Related: CT Scans Reveal the Youngest Mummified Fetus Ever Found | Conservation Lab Microscopic Slivers of Artworks Reveal Hidden Truths | Conservation Lab Painting Cover-Ups, Exposed!
|
|
Nowadays, the medium is reworked, elevated, and filtered through a contemporary view to create versions inflected with pop-culture collage or representations of microscopic algae.
|
|
Trilobites Tardigrades, eight-legged microscopic animals that resemble obese caterpillars, can survive temperatures close to absolute zero and live after being baked at 300 degrees.
|
|
But in 2008, the county revealed a new system that filtered sewage water through microscopic holes and disinfected it with ultraviolet light to zap contaminants.
|
|
What emerges is a complicated meshing of ideas — the unforeseen consequences of rapacity, the way life can alter in a single moment — with microscopic observation.
|
|
In this case, Duan and his team created microscopic nanotubes made of carbon and shaped like bed springs (which is why they're called nano-coils).
|
|
Teeth, wedding rings, genetic markers from hair samples and other means of matching a microscopic body part to a name were fed into a database.
|
|
His abstracted photos play with the viewer's perspective on the microscopic and macroscopic levels, conjuring both the cellular world and the edge of the universe.
|
|
What the group discovered (via electron scanning microscope) is that the surfaces of the penguins' feathers are covered in a layer of dense microscopic fibers.
|
|
As eclectic as Haeckel's lithographs, De Giuli's microscopic entities are set in motion, fanning out into meshes before resting and finally disappearing into black voids.
|
|
They're separate worlds, this microscopic living one and the macro mechanical one, but the clip highlights their connections, drawing them into similar scales and timelines.
|
|
Embedded inside it were microscopic blue space crystals, called hibonites, which are thought to be among the first minerals that formed in the solar system.
|
|
He was convicted based on a hair found at the scene, which bore microscopic similarities to his own, but the F.B.I. later discredited the process.
|
|
The exhibition is, of course, about hidden ocean wonders, but it features more than the usual suspects of blue whales and frighteningly enlarged microscopic plankton.
|
|
Dr. Erickson did microscopic studies of bone growth rings, which led to a determination of how old individual dinosaurs were and how fast they grew.
|
|
In 2013, George Kourounis descended into the flames to search for microscopic life — becoming the only person ever to reach the bottom of the crater.
|
|
But because no fiber is perfectly transparent, some tiny amount of light will always scatter, bouncing back toward shore off microscopic flaws in the glass.
|
|
She is known for work on other quick microscopic movements, like the jaws of the trap jaw ant or the hammer of the mantis shrimp.
|
|
We run the risk of scrubbing, disinfecting, vacuuming and filtering out the fortifying mix of microscopic creatures that our immune system needs to develop properly.
|
|
He wanted to check for microscopic bacteria, believing that if life could thrive in those harsh conditions, there may be similar life on another planet.
|
|
Recent studies have shown that puffing on e-cigarettes increases concentration of these microscopic pollutants — in particular, PM2.5 and ultra-fine particles — in indoor environments.
|
|
With African-American women, Gallup put his 2017 approval rating at a microscopic 6%, virtually unchanged from his miniscule 4% vote with them in 2016.
|
|
If it's complete, but you're obsessing over the most microscopic of details, perhaps it's time to let go of those concerns and go for it.
|
|
Scientists working at the University of British Columbia reported Friday that they had captured the first high-resolution video of this microscopic harpooner in action.
|
|
She is known for work on other quick microscopic movements, like the jaws of the trap jaw ant or the hammer of the mantis shrimp.
|
|
The microscopic particles, which are smaller than 2.5 micrometers in diameter, can lodge deep into the lungs and pass into other organs and the bloodstream.
|
|
The 12 landscapes in The Magic Hour are limned with reverence, but there's also the microscopic gaze of someone as curious as he is mystified.
|
|
Tardigrades, sometimes referred to as moss piglets or water bears, are eight-legged microscopic animals that like to live in moss, lichen, decaying leaves, and soil.
|
|
Most recently, one team observed that, under the right conditions, they could cause a Bose-Einstein Condensate to emit a burst of jets like microscopic fireworks.
|
|
That's obviously not how future medical science is going to work, but the notion of creating microscopic machines to perform complex tasks is certainly on point.
|
|
When prions are next to their normal counterparts, they very slowly, but relentlessly, convert them into more prions, like a microscopic Agent Smith from the Matrix.
|
|
Recently, she found success with a new topical, Evolve NanoSerum, a product of NanoSphere Health Sciences, which delivers microscopic particles of THC right into her bloodstream.
|
|
I'm not surprised, for Ctrl is what seekers of aesthetic difficulty call a grower, the kind of album whose stunning details blossom after prolonged microscopic contemplation.
|
|
When you look at fur, the light has taken an extended journey before hitting your eye, bouncing around lots of fur fibers and their microscopic structures.
|
|
For now, this metalens may only exist in a microscopic world, but the researchers envision bigger things in the years ahead — though how long remains uncertain.
|
|
The use of asbestos was widely reduced when it was discovered that these microscopic fibers could embed in lung tissue, causing lung diseases and respiratory problems.
|
|
For example, the second law of thermodynamics states that a system's entropy—a measure of the amount of hidden microscopic information—will always grow in time.
|
|
Accion's engine, about the size of a small coin, uses 2100 microscopic nozzles that make use of capillary action that direct propellant out of the engine.
|
|
A new camera app means microscopic shutter lag, intelligent HDR photos and anyone buying a Pixel gets unlimited storage of full-resolution images in the Cloud.
|
|
Credit: University of Surrey"Moths' eyes have microscopic patterning that allows them to see in the dimmest conditions," co-author Ravi Silva said in a statement.
|
|
Technically speaking, the microscope is not producing "true" color images, but rather a false-color visualization of key features found within microscopic objects, such as cells.
|
|
For years, scientists and environmentalists have wondered—and worried—if the simple act of washing our clothes might be triggering the release of microscopic plastic particles.
|
|
The new research shows that over 700,730 microscopic fibers are flushed down the washing machine's drain each time we run a load in a conventional washer.
|
|
This is the result of a process called bleaching, in which coral reacts to higher water temperatures by ejecting the microscopic algae that give it colour.
|
|
The microscopic bugs formed colonies on the sea floor, depositing carbonates and combining with sediment to make mounds that were eventually preserved in layers of rock.
|
|
The samples, which contain both microscopic brain slides and "wet" specimens, were discovered during renovations last year, much to the surprise of Germany's leading psychiatric institute.
|
|
To that end, Dragonfly will be equipped with a mass spectrometer, gamma ray spectrometer, a camera (capable of both microscopic and panoramic images!), and other instruments.
|
|
Cilia, microscopic hair-like projections on the nose tissue, are responsible for detecting the chemical components of odors and transmitting that information to the sensory neurons.
|
|
A small-city mayor has never before won the presidency, let alone one who still has microscopic name recognition compared to his Democratic opponents, or Trump.
|
|
Related: A 4K Timelapse Shows the Harmony of the Universe A Microscopic Look at the City of Lights Speed Through Hyperspace in this Mirrored Video Installation
|
|
Every time you wash your fleece jacket or other synthetic clothing, microscopic synthetic fibres are released and end up in our food supply and drinking water.
|
|
It's often spread when a person consumes even a microscopic amount of fecal matter from an infected person, who spreads it through touch, the release explains.
|
|
That's before you've even get on to the present-opening bit where everyone stands around clapping and any microscopic signs of disappointment are magnified ten-fold.
|
|
Incredibly complex and filled with thousands of microscopic markings that form a mosaic of smaller scenes, the drawing represents the great complexities of the artist's life.
|
|
This collection fueled his 2014 debut, Guud, a totally inimitable collage of gothic sounds that interrogates what is "conventionally good" music on a microscopic sonic level.
|
|
Dividing "reality" into ever more microscopic fields, the joyously weird new contest shows celebrate the deviations from the normal, amplifying a subculture's arcana to stadium size.
|
|
How it works is that researchers coat the sperm in microscopic metal polymers shaped into a helix, which are then controlled using a rotating magnetic field.
|
|
Every minute detail is rendered with microscopic precision, and you don't have to be an audiophile to pinpoint the tiniest nuances and alterations in a note.
|
|
The Yankees entered Wednesday needing one more day of Rasputin-like survival instincts to keep alive their playoff hopes, which hovered somewhere between microscopic and nonexistent.
|
|
Charlotte mastered a nearly microscopic handwriting, with the appearance of printed fonts, to give her sub-Lilliputian publications the look of a finished book or magazine.
|
|
Compared with the microscopic returns on bank savings rates, REITs, with an average trailing 12-month yield of 1.85 percent, have been an attractive yield play.
|
|
Mr. McLaren said his team of forensic investigators found microscopic scratches on the Sochi bottles, along with indications that the urine they held had been changed.
|
|
Other promising approaches include exotic materials such as carbon nanotubes and even microscopic mechanical switches that can be opened and closed just like an electronic gate.
|
|
"Algae, although still microscopic, are a thousand times larger in volume than cyanobacteria, and are a much richer food source," Dr. Brocks said in the release.
|
|
He discovered, to his surprise, that the random quantum effects that rule the microscopic world would cause black holes to leak and, eventually, explode and disappear.
|
|
People are clearing out grocery aisle shelves amid the coronavirus pandemic -- but the microscopic enemy's also got folks ready to shoot their way out this problem.
|
|
During the Open Days, one such graduate, Caterina, a 21-year-tailor in Fendi's ready-to-wear atelier, sewed microscopic bits of fur onto delicate tulle.
|
|
" Our physics expert writes that the three found ways to turn "one of the most ineffable aspects of nature, pure light, into a mighty microscopic force.
|
|
Investigators will also carry out forensic testing on the devices, looking for things like microscopic DNA traces, and tracking down where the particular components were purchased.
|
|
This spring, loads of microscopic plant sperm cells are finding their way into our nasal passages and unleashing the hell on earth that is seasonal allergies.
|
|
This ruling has predictably led a state district map that's composed of huge chunks in the rural areas, and microscopic puzzle pieces in the urban ones.
|
|
You could try using a facial cleanser on the skin (one with a pH close to 5) to remove sebum without any risk of microscopic trauma.
|
|
In order to get a sense of Azendohsaurus's metabolism, Dr. Cubo and his colleague Nour-Eddine Jalil took slices of bone and examined the microscopic structure.
|
|
He was also an inventor, and in his home studio and backyard, developed a variety of cinematographic and micro-photographic techniques to capture nature's microscopic wonders.
|
|
B.P.P.V. is caused by microscopic "stones" that are present on the ends of hair cells in the ear canal and that help you maintain your balance.
|
|
The helmet is covered in red spikes with bulbs on the end, just like the microscopic image of the coronavirus, which causes the disease Covid-19.
|
|
But to get so few mutations, the fungus must have had very few cell divisions, which is crazy for a giant fungus made of microscopic cells.
|
|
The procedure involves injecting the microscopic gene-editing tool into the eye of the patient, who is nearly blind from a condition called Leber congenital amaurosis.
|
|
It's easy to ridicule the Mike Hugheses of the world, have-nothings who gamble their lives on a lottery offering only a microscopic chance of success.
|
|
The giveaway that you've been hit is when the charge slip lists an amount in your home currency with microscopic print that claims you gave consent.
|
|
"Amazon is a microscopic portion of global consumption today, so ultimately I think it has more room to grow before it invites regulatory overview," Palihapitiya said.
|
|
The Silicon Valley darling, at one time valued at $9 billion, claimed that it only needed a microscopic amount of blood for its automated blood tests.
|
|
In each machine a microscopic fleck of molten tin is dropped in front of a laser beam powerful enough to cut metal 50m times a second.
|
|
Recent studies have also shown that puffing on e-cigarettes increases concentration of these microscopic pollutants — in particular, PM2.5 and ultra-fine particles — in indoor environments.
|
|
He suggests starting with microscopic behaviors (just read one headline in the newspaper every morning after you drink your cup of coffee) to encourage better adoption.
|
|
Each "gecko-inspired climbing device" is made up of 24 adhesive pads, each coated in microscopic saw-tooth shaped polymer structures optimized primarily for flat surfaces.
|
|
Lidar's use of light, which is also reflected by small—even microscopic—drops, paints a more accurate picture of the way moisture is distributed within a storm.
|
|
These critical exponents are clearly independent of either material's microscopic details, arising instead from something that both systems, and others in their "universality class," have in common.
|
|
To identify PFAS compounds in drinking water, the EPA uses a lab test called "Method 2537," which separates microscopic molecules so they can be more easily seen.
|
|
This can help remove surface dirt as well as some germs and bacteria, although the FDA points out that it may not remove microscopic parasites like cyclospora.
|
|
Such microscopic geodesic domes quickly became the standard way to represent icosahedral viruses, and, for a while, it seemed that Caspar and Klug had solved the problem.
|
|
In many ways, thermodynamics is the gold standard of an emergent law, describing the collective behavior of a large number of particles, irrespective of many microscopic details.
|
|
Scientists had switched miasma theory of disease for germ theory: they understood that many diseases were caused not by "bad airs", but by microscopic organisms like bacteria.
|
|
The two used techniques such as Fourier transform, infra-red spectroscopy and stereo-microscopic studies to conclude that cannabis sativa had helped in preventing insects at Ellora.
|
|
The Madison, Wisconsin, 4-year-old was diagnosed with a rare autoimmune-related vasculitis called Microscopic Polyangiitis (MPA), which eventually causes the patient's kidneys to shut down.
|
|
The Japanese government bond market has been the most immune to upticks in inflation, however microscopic, because the Bank of Japan and domestic owners of bonds dominate.
|
|
At the microscopic level, the compounds rely on an incredibly strong molecular bond to keep water out, while remaining flexible and durable enough to be comfortably worn.
|
|
This next image, which looks like a Gustav Klimt painting, is a microscopic view inside the curling structure of a leaf cluster from a young maize plant.
|
|
Thanks to previous NASA research, we know that at least some parts of the planet were, in fact, capable of supporting microscopic life as we understand it.
|
|
To do so, they have made a membrane laced with microscopic Turing patterns that can remove salts from water up to four times faster than commercial alternatives.
|
|
For a photographer who's watched the evolution of digital photography from the early days, the level of quality these microscopic sensors deliver is nothing short of astonishing.
|
|
When the number of terrorism-related fatalities dropped to microscopic levels, we still didn't believe the threat was gone — especially since there continued to be smaller attacks.
|
|
These ancient and surprisingly adorable microscopic creatures are capable of withstanding the worst that nature can throw at them, making them a valuable organism for scientific inquiry.
|
|
Tardigrades — microscopic animals that primarily live in water — are some of the most fascinating creatures on Earth, with biological powers of resilience usually found in comic books.
|
|
"A follicle inside an ovary is releasing a microscopic egg so the fallopian tubes can catch it," explains Carolyn Alexander, MD of the Southern California Reproductive Center.
|
|
Related: Microscopic Photos of Wood Are Gorgeous Biological Abstractions | Conservation Lab Artist Brings Glitch Aesthetic to Carved Wooden Sculptures Found Railroad Detritus Is a Marvel at Sunset
|
|
An 80-foot-long flatbed scanner examines swaths of polyethylene for the microscopic defects that can reduce a balloon's survival at 60,000 feet from months to days.
|
|
According to the study, published in Nature, the microscopic critters living in your digestive tract might contribute to a tendency toward gaining weight back after losing it.
|
|
Instead of exciting a chemical material to emit photons, light actually ends up getting trapped between those microscopic gold particles and the reflective backing they adhere to.
|
|
As is often the case with aliens on the big screen, the crew's elation over the microscopic organism quickly devolves into fear and a struggle for survival.
|
|
In the past, the biggest worry was the amount of soot, smoke and fine particles of dust, dirt and other microscopic matter they puffed into the street.
|
|
Karl Ove Knausgaard's My Struggle, one of the most celebrated novels of recent years, is a 3,000-page account of one man's life told in microscopic detail.
|
|
Now, he's taken the comically teeny bag trend to a whole new level with the release of the microscopic mini Le Petit Chiquito from hisFall/Winter 2019collection.
|
|
IBM's Verifier is a gadget and platform made (naturally) to instantly verify that something is what it claims to be, by inspecting it at a microscopic level.
|
|
It turns out that if there is an effect, it is extremely small, and seeing it seems to require special scanners that look at microscopic bone architecture.
|
|
This itchy rash, formally known as Pseudomonas folliculitis, occurs when the microscopic Pseudomonas aeruginosa bacteria comes into contact with your skin for a long period of time.
|
|
The study, published in Nature, sought to establish a baseline for the North American "microbiome," or the trillions of microscopic organisms in every corner of your body.
|
|
That's very fashionable, and it allows people to congratulate themselves on being progressive while really stepping a microscopic amount away from the body standards we have now.
|
|
In his last four games when the Senators are facing elimination since 26, Anderson has posted a 211-27 record with a microscopic 2922 GAA and a .
|
|
When inhaled, the microscopic particles, known as particulates, can be absorbed into the bloodstream and lungs, causing or aggravating health problems such as asthma and heart disease.
|
|
"We basically just pulverized these magnets into microscopic particles and incorporated them into the ink," said Dr. Bandodkar, who is now a postdoctoral fellow at Northwestern University.
|
|
Dr. Ashkin invented "optical tweezers," which use the pressure from a highly focused laser beam to manipulate microscopic objects, including living organisms such as viruses and bacteria.
|
|
Right whales are baleen whales, so they filter feed, supporting their 70-ton weight — nearly as much as the Space Shuttle — solely with microscopic animals called zooplankton.
|
|
It's called the novel coronavirus — a microscopic molecular bundle of fat and proteins that resemble a nightmare dish of sour gummy worms snaking their bodies through couscous.
|
|
The chance of an upset had shrunk from microscopic to infinitesimal at the 16:58 mark of the first quarter when the Warriors led by 16 points.
|
|
Artists in particular were fascinated with the previously-unseen microscopic animals he portrayed, as they considered in the early 1900s how to visually respond to modern knowledge.
|
|
Microscopic crystalline structures transform the material from white to yellow and blue, a function you can see in real time as your shadow passes over the fabric.
|
|
But just like the microscopic mass of cells this baby had once been, and the tumor before him, something not yet detectable was growing inside my body.
|
|
Had the compound been acting like detergent—indiscriminately killing living tissue—this might have explained the microscopic carnage, but in tests with mammalian cells it was nontoxic.
|
|
The microscopic particles are considered particularly harmful because they are small enough to lodge deep into the lungs and can pass into other organs or the bloodstream.
|
|
On these results, though, one would have to conclude that the establishment lane was a superhighway, while the social lane was tiny and the economic lane microscopic.
|
|
Replete with exploding green blotches, Rocha Pitta demonstrates the quiet violence of the microscopic world; it is a place where cells reproduce and die with unfathomable speed.
|
|
He told him where he was from, which was more than enough to win the benevolence of the king who rules over this microscopic venue in Pereira.
|
|
Related: Street Artist Remed Opens Portals to Spirituality Layer by Layer Reconstructions of Old Master Paintings | Conservation Lab Microscopic Slivers of Artworks Reveal Hidden Truths | Conservation Lab
|
|
The ceramic's astonishingly beautiful iridescent hues, that accentuate the entrancing nuances of color, are not generated by pigments but by the microscopic structure of the material itself.
|
|
The waters surrounding islands are rich in phytoplankton, microscopic organisms that inhabit the upper layers of the oceans and serve as an important food source for larger animals.
|
|
A recently concluded survey of the planet-forming disks around young stars suggests these strange transmissions are being produced by something rather extraordinary: dense clouds of microscopic diamonds.
|
|
The device took in puffs of air and was equipped with a tiny filter that could trap microscopic bacteria and aerosol particles as small as 25 micrometers across.
|
|
In order to protect information-bearing DNA they encapsulated it in a synthetic 'fossil' shell made from a microscopic silica glass particle with diameter of roughly 150 nanometers.
|
|
People can be infected with as few as 20 to 1,300 microscopic viral particles, so their study shows that vomiting could indeed spread the infection through the air.
|
|
Bringing out the microscopic pathology images, Dr. Lee explains that Lisa had what's called an inflamed follicular cyst — and there's no risk of cancer, or the lump returning.
|
|
Under a scanning electron microscope, she discovered that this film is made of millions of microscopic melanin granules shaped like drug capsules, capped by a thin gelatinous layer.
|
|
The microscopic larvae live in sand or soil that has been contaminated with dog or cat feces, says Pritt, and enter the foot by directly penetrating the skin.
|
|
An endoscope — a thin snake-like medical device that allows doctors to view the inside of a body — had been retooled to view tissues on a microscopic level.
|
|
Even less is known about "nano"-scale plastic particles about the size of molecules and whether they pass as easily through the digestive tract as merely microscopic particles.
|
|
Every aspect of the book — its length, its language, its microscopic attention to detail, its apparent self-indulgence, its mass of notes — is aligned with its overarching subjects.
|
|
At its most straightforward, a transistor—or field effect transistor, to give the microscopic device found in all your electronics its proper name—is just a tiny switch.
|
|
LifeStraw products wield a hollow fiber membrane, which features microscopic pores that trap contaminants — bacteria and parasites are bigger than the pores in the filter, but water isn't.
|
|
Untold tonnes end up as irretrievable ocean flotsam, which sunlight and salt fragment into microscopic pieces that attract toxins and may be gulped by creatures that become seafood.
|
|
Infected people can shed billions of microscopic norovirus particles, according to the U.S. CDC, and exposure to just a few of those particles can make someone else sick.
|
|
In polluted regions, these particles can number in the thousands per square inch of air, acting like a microscopic screen and blocking out some of the Sun's rays.
|
|
"Amber pieces preserve tiny snapshots of ancient ecosystems, but they record microscopic details, three-dimensional arrangements, and...tissues that are difficult to study in other settings," noted McKellar.
|
|
A team of scientists at North Carolina State University is working on new ways to remotely-control soft robot parts, by embedding microscopic iron particles into polymer sheets.
|
|
The heavy atoms in cameras will continue to be replaced with bits of weightless software, shrinking them down to microscopic dots scanning the environment 24 hours a day.
|
|
But for physicists like Andres Concha, a professor at Adolfo Ibáñez University in Santiago, Chile, this bizarre ability offers fascinating insights into several fields, including microscopic fluid dynamics.
|
|
In Loon's Balloon Forensics Lab, Pam Desrochers uses an 80-foot-long flatbed scanner to examine swaths of polyethylene for microscopic defects and signs of wear after flight.
|
|
The algae used in the study is microscopic, meaning that 800,000 square miles of the stuff would have to be grown to meet the current demands for fuel.
|
|
It wasn't your garden variety fake news: By cramming microscopic particles of gold and silver together into pellets, they said, they'd constructed the first ever room-temperature superconductor.
|
|
That's a microscopic piece of the time that Evans spent onscreen in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, a franchise whose world was built across 22 movies over 11 years.
|
|
These animals come in a wide variety of styles, sometimes with frilly tendrils extending from the mouth for catching their microscopic food: algae, tiny animals, general organic nonsense.
|
|
Retroactively adding details about microscopic life forms living in your body doesn't totally fit with Obi-Wan's explanation, making our image of the Force messier instead of clearer.
|
|
That nonprofit constructed a library of books and encyclopedias containing 30 million pages laser-etched onto microscopic nickel plates, complete with a primer on how to read them.
|
|
Plus, it features Dyson's Radial Root Cyclone technology to capture tons of microscopic dust, which can be emptied from its canister with the press of a single button.
|
|
In the bottle, the surfactants are arranged in little clusters called micelles, with the heads pointing outward and the tails pointing in so they're in a microscopic circle.
|
|
Extreme fussiness, minuscule obsessional detailing, and strict timeframes were paramount in creating an authenticity, so I welcomed any opinions on fashion codes—the more militantly microscopic, the better.
|
|
Oryx is developing light sensing technology for autonomous vehicles to identify debris and other objects on the road using silicon-made microscopic antennas to detect light wave frequencies.
|
|
Second, the film on which the hologram is captured is not a smooth one but, rather, a sheet of transparent plastic with microscopic bumps and grooves in it.
|
|
Related: Microscopic Photos of Wood Are Gorgeous Biological Abstractions | Conservation Lab Inside Harvard's Incredible Collection of Rare Pigments | Conservation Lab The Art of Mending Ceramics Disasters | Conservation Lab
|
|
This time around, he wanted to capture more of that microscopic structure, showcasing "how each individual segment on a barbule can have a different color," he told Gizmodo.
|
|
"One of their jobs now is going to be to look at every single sample under microscopic analysis to be sure none have been tampered with," he said.
|
|
Even in writing fiction, I tend to be heavily outline-driven, planning out character and story trajectories in microscopic detail over months before I write the first word.
|
|
By scanning 7,400 slices of a preserved human female brain, Amunts and her team were able to create a 22014D map depicting the organ's anatomy in microscopic detail.
|
|
Related: Explore a Terraformed Micro World in 'Ecosynthesis' Suspended Liquids Become Cosmic Landscapes in Susie Sie's New Video Bask In The Eerie Simplicity Of Microscopic Worlds With 'Confluence'
|
|
Offices provide hundreds of microscopic hiding spots for viruses and bacteria -- the crevices in your keyboard, the button for your floor on the elevator, the communal fridge handle.
|
|
Microstamping is technology that imprints a bullet's casing with a microscopic array of characters that can be used to identify the firearm, similar to a license plate number.
|
|
As I desperately tried to put the previous night's pieces together, the reality of the day ahead came into microscopic focus with the intensity of a blinding migraine.
|
|
"He recognized that I spent 99 percent of my life as the public persona and just a microscopic crumb of a fraction in my real life," she recalled.
|
|
Probably because the ink granules are too bulky for the microscopic Pac-Mans to break down, they hold onto the pigment, your body art shining through their bellies.
|
|