When scientist J. Craig Venter and his team announced in 2010 that they had created the first cell controlled by a fully synthetic genome, it marked a turning point in how scientists think about life.
New biography of Alan R. Moritz traces how forensic science learned to define what it can — and cannot — know.
The vast amount of misinformation circulating in public health is largely due to not understanding evidence-based science.
Michal Kopera, associate professor of mathematics and director of the Numerical Modeling Lab, or NUMO Lab, has been awarded a ...
Penn Engineers have developed a new way to use AI to solve inverse partial differential equations (PDEs), a particularly ...
I don't understand why public health figures like Jay Bhattacharya who controlled 58 billion dollars of funding uh didn't use ...
Halide perovskites are gaining ground on silicon as a critical material for solar cell technologies: A new study published in ...
Venter redrew the boundaries of biology — sequencing DNA at unprecedented speed, engineering synthetic life and charting ...
Each study adds a piece to the puzzle of scientific knowledge. But any one study on its own doesn’t tell you all that much.
Authors: Dr. Benjamin W. Johnson, Earth, atmosphere and climate (EAC) Dr. Jacqueline Reber, EAC Dr. Alan Wanamaker, EAC Dr.
In 2003, scientists at the University of Idaho accomplished the impossible – they cloned a mule. KTVB caught up with a member ...
Tests promising to reveal your “biological age” are booming. But scientists say the results vary widely — and aren’t reliable ...