All articles by Josh Howgego – Page 2
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News
Silicene grown for (probably) the first time
Scientists present the most compelling evidence yet for a one atom-thick sheet of silicon
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News
Teeth fight back against bacteria with graphene sensor
A remote sensor operating on tooth enamel is a promising blueprint for non-invasive diagnostic devices
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Research
Teeth fight back against bacteria with graphene sensor
People who believe that their teeth are transmitting messages - perhaps from the CIA - through secret implants in their fillings can normally be dismissed as unbalanced
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Research
Teeth fight back against bacteria with graphene sensor
A remote sensor operating on tooth enamel is a promising blueprint for non-invasive diagnostic devices
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Podcast
Green fluorescent protein
Attracting our attention with its fluorescent glow, here's Josh Howgego with GFP
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News
Small molecules open gates to the brain
A new chemical toolbox will help researchers tease out how the brain operates
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News
Graphene memorises data in a flash
A prototype graphene flash memory material is already outperforming its commercial silicon counterparts on data storage
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News
Cosmic rays get ahead in CLOUD
Organic aerosols may play a much more important role in cloud formation that previously thought
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News
Expanded genetic alphabet could spell out new genes
DNA with six, rather than four, bases could be used as the genetic code for synthetic life
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News
Worms modified to express unnatural amino acids
Tiny worms engineered to add unnatural amino acids to their proteins could help uncover disease pathways
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News
Enzyme inspired nickel complex races to produce hydrogen
Catalyst that mimics hydrogenase enzymes turns out hydrogen 10 times faster than its biological counterparts
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News
Calcium ion is the key to plant's water splitting secret
A model of the heart of the photosynthetic complex plants use to split water has provided new insights
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Podcast
Neuraminic acid
Josh Howgego explains how this sugary compound is implicated in some of the most significant processes in the human body
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News
UK research needs an independent integrity body
A government report has said that the oversight of UK research integrity is 'unsatisfactory'
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News
Magnets turn up the heat on tumours
French researchers have exploited iron oxide structures found in bacteria to kill tumours using a magnetic field
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