Magnetized algae micro swimmers retain speed and maneuverability, showing promise for targeted drug delivery in confined biological environments. A team of researchers at the (MPI-IS) in Stuttgart has ...
Despite the coating, they maintained their swimming speed after magnetization, demonstrating an average swimming speed of 115 micrometers per second (about 12 body lengths per second). By ...
Scientists have revealed how tiny swimming cells—such as sperm and bacteria—are able to move faster when traveling as a group ...
Phys.org on MSN18d
Magnetic microalgae on a mission to become robotsDespite the coating, they maintained their swimming speed after magnetization, demonstrating an average swimming speed of 115 micrometers per second (about 12 body lengths per second). By comparison: ...
Despite the coating, they maintained their swimming speed after magnetization, demonstrating an average swimming speed of 115 micrometers per second (about 12 body lengths per second). By ...
they varied their swimming speed more, while swimming between 1.2 and 1.5 times faster. They also made three times more turns, over an angle that was on average 1.4 times greater. In a second set of ...
The study suggests that even the faintest hint of penguin droppings in the water is enough to prompt krill into escape ...
With less than two weeks left in the regular season, we’re taking a look at what each team’s final fortnight focus should be.
Just a faint whiff of penguin poop pushes their favorite prey to take "frantic" evasive action, reveals new research.
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