Just like every other creature, bacteria have evolved creative ways of getting around. Sometimes this is easy, like swimming ...
While mirror bacteria may sound like a fun time, a group of 40 renowned scientists conclude it is probably not worth the risk.
The original version of this story appeared in Quanta Magazine. Prochlorococcus bacteria are so small that you’d have to line up around a thousand of them to match the thickness of a human thumbnail.
These bacteria don’t eat food or breathe air like we do. All they need is to complete a circuit; that’s enough for them to live.
Our hands are mirror images of each other. Unless you flip one hand around, they’ll never look the same. Scientists call this chirality, and the mirror-like property is fundamental to all life on ...
Human health risks from direct consumption of toxic nanoplastics are already scary, but researchers have confirmed that nanoplastics in water give rise to an additional threat: They strengthen ...
Modern society seems to have gone germophobic—say the word "bacteria" and most people will immediately conjure images of nasty illnesses and dangerous infections. But bacteria, fungi and other ...
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