Articles for category: Biology & Genetics, Biotechnology, Disease & Medicine, Microbiology

Engineering Phages with CRISPR to Fight Superbugs

8 Times California Led the Nation in Biotech Innovation

Trizzy Orozco

Imagine a place where wild coastal cliffs meet the world’s most cutting-edge laboratories, where the hum of ocean waves seems to sync with the pulse of scientific discovery. That’s California—a land of endless reinvention and the beating heart of America’s biotech revolution. From the sun-drenched streets of San Diego to the innovation-packed corridors of the ...

The CRISPR Revolution Hits American Soil

5 States Where Gene Editing Tech Is Already in Use on Farms

Annette Uy

Picture this: a farmer walks through rows of soybeans that can withstand drought better than their ancestors ever could. These aren’t your grandmother’s crops – they’re the result of precise molecular scissors that cut and paste DNA with surgical accuracy. While many people think gene editing is still science fiction, the reality is that this ...

Levitation Through Magnetic Fields

6 NASA Facilities You Didn’t Know Were Scattered Across the U.S.

Trizzy Orozco

Picture this: somewhere off a quiet highway in Mississippi, a monstrous rocket engine rumbles to life, shaking the pine trees for miles around. In a nondescript Pennsylvania town, scientists probe the secrets of icy alien oceans. Not every NASA facility is a famous launch pad in Florida or a massive control room in Houston—some are ...

Thermal imaging

Ultra-Thin Lenses That Make Infrared Light Visible

April Joy Jovita

Physicists at ETH Zurich have developed an ultra-thin lens capable of converting infrared light into visible wavelengths. This breakthrough, achieved using lithium niobate metasurfaces, could revolutionize imaging technology by enabling compact, high-performance optical devices. How Metalenses Work Traditional lenses rely on curved glass to bend light toward a focal point, but metalenses use nanoscale structures ...

dire wolf

Rewilding with Code? The Dire Wolf’s Return & The Future of Conservation

Jan Otte

Romulus and Remus, two snow-white canids with powerful shoulders and wide jaws, look like something out of myth. In a way, they are. Born in the fall of 2024 through cutting-edge genetic engineering, they are the first living examples of what scientists believe to be true dire wolves in over 10,000 years. The species once ...