Warning: mysqli_connect(): (08004/1040): Too many connections in /var/www/htdocs/technewsnow/repository/db_mysql_tek.php on line 46

Warning: mysqli_connect(): (08004/1040): Too many connections in /var/www/htdocs/technewsnow/repository/db_mysql_tek.php on line 46

Warning: mysqli_connect(): (08004/1040): Too many connections in /var/www/htdocs/technewsnow/repository/db_mysql_tek.php on line 46

Warning: mysqli_connect(): (08004/1040): Too many connections in /var/www/htdocs/technewsnow/repository/db_mysql_tek.php on line 46

Warning: mysqli_connect(): (08004/1040): Too many connections in /var/www/htdocs/technewsnow/repository/db_mysql_tek.php on line 46

Warning: mysqli_connect(): (08004/1040): Too many connections in /var/www/htdocs/technewsnow/repository/db_mysql_tek.php on line 46

Warning: mysqli_connect(): (08004/1040): Too many connections in /var/www/htdocs/technewsnow/repository/db_mysql_tek.php on line 46

Warning: mysqli_connect(): (08004/1040): Too many connections in /var/www/htdocs/technewsnow/repository/db_mysql_tek.php on line 46

Warning: mysqli_connect(): (08004/1040): Too many connections in /var/www/htdocs/technewsnow/repository/db_mysql_tek.php on line 46

Warning: mysqli_connect(): (08004/1040): Too many connections in /var/www/htdocs/technewsnow/repository/db_mysql_tek.php on line 46

Warning: mysqli_connect(): (08004/1040): Too many connections in /var/www/htdocs/technewsnow/repository/db_mysql_tek.php on line 46

Warning: mysqli_connect(): (08004/1040): Too many connections in /var/www/htdocs/technewsnow/repository/db_mysql_tek.php on line 46

Warning: mysqli_connect(): (08004/1040): Too many connections in /var/www/htdocs/technewsnow/repository/db_mysql_tek.php on line 46

Warning: mysqli_connect(): (08004/1040): Too many connections in /var/www/htdocs/technewsnow/repository/db_mysql_tek.php on line 46

Warning: mysqli_connect(): (08004/1040): Too many connections in /var/www/htdocs/technewsnow/repository/db_mysql_tek.php on line 46

Warning: mysqli_connect(): (08004/1040): Too many connections in /var/www/htdocs/technewsnow/repository/db_mysql_tek.php on line 46

Warning: mysqli_connect(): (08004/1040): Too many connections in /var/www/htdocs/technewsnow/repository/db_mysql_tek.php on line 46

Warning: mysqli_connect(): (08004/1040): Too many connections in /var/www/htdocs/technewsnow/repository/db_mysql_tek.php on line 46

Warning: mysqli_connect(): (08004/1040): Too many connections in /var/www/htdocs/technewsnow/repository/db_mysql_tek.php on line 46

Warning: mysqli_connect(): (08004/1040): Too many connections in /var/www/htdocs/technewsnow/repository/db_mysql_tek.php on line 46
These Sea Slugs Decapitate Themselves And Grow New Bodies - Latest Technology News | TechNewsNow.com :: TechnewsNow.com
Advertisements


These Sea Slugs Decapitate Themselves and Grow New Bodies

Showing off their best impressions of Deadpool, the animals survived for weeks without organs, only to regrow everything and go about their business......»»

Category: gadgetSource:  wiredMar 8th, 2021

Plants could still grow well under alien skies

Photosynthesis changed Earth in powerful ways. When photosynthetic organisms appeared, it led to the Great Oxygenation Event. That allowed multicellular life to evolve and resulted in the ozone layer. Life could venture onto land, protected from the.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsSep 20th, 2024

Microplastics: Meant to last, just not forever and not in our bodies

Megan Hill is an assistant professor of chemistry and leader of the Hill Lab in Colorado State University's College of Natural Sciences. Her research leverages organic chemistry to design advanced polymeric materials for applications in sustainabilit.....»»

Category: topSource:  marketingvoxRelated NewsSep 19th, 2024

Harnessing nature"s rhythm: Piezocatalysis for organic pollutant degradation

With the rapid growth of industrial and agricultural activities, water bodies are increasingly contaminated with harmful organic pollutants such as dyes, antibiotics, and bisphenol A. Traditional methods like adsorption, chemical treatments, and biol.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsSep 19th, 2024

Researchers discover highest second-harmonic generation response in deep-ultraviolet phosphate

In the field of nonlinear optics (NLO), deep-ultraviolet (DUV) NLO crystals have garnered attention due to their crucial role in all-solid-state lasers. With ongoing research, the demand for these DUV NLO crystals continues to grow......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsSep 18th, 2024

Ocean waves grow way beyond known limits, new research finds

Scientists have discovered that ocean waves may become far more extreme and complex than previously imagined......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsSep 18th, 2024

Slow-moving landslides a growing, but ignored, threat to mountain communities

As urban centers in mountainous regions grow, more people are driven to build on steeper slopes prone to slow-moving landslides, a new study finds. Slow-moving landslides are frequently excluded from estimates of landslide risk, but they could threat.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsSep 18th, 2024

Over 3,600 food packaging chemicals found in human bodies

More than 3,600 chemicals used in food packaging or preparation have been detected in human bodies, some of which are hazardous to health, while little is known about others, a study said Tuesday......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsSep 17th, 2024

Research points to a potential new ally in the fight against plant pathogens

When we talk about the microbiome, most of us think of the trillions of microorganisms that live in our bodies, supporting everything from digestion to mental health......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsSep 13th, 2024

An evolutionary battleground: Plants vs. microbes

Gazing out on a freshwater pond, you may see tiny green plants with oval-shaped leaves floating in clusters. In overgrown ponds, these plants coat the water's surface. These plants—called duckweed or water lentils—can grow so fast that they can d.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsSep 12th, 2024

The Cost of Lightning

Exactly how climate change will impact lightning isn’t clear, but governments, public bodies, and the military are prepping for stormier weather......»»

Category: gadgetSource:  wiredRelated NewsSep 11th, 2024

Wildfires around Los Angeles blanket city in smoke

Out-of-control wildfires surrounding Los Angeles continued to grow Tuesday, forcing families to evacuate and blanketing the sky with choking smoke......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsSep 11th, 2024

The world is pumping out 57 million tons of plastic pollution a year

The world creates 57 million tons of plastic pollution every year and spreads it from the deepest oceans to the highest mountaintop to the inside of people's bodies, according to a new study that also said more than two-thirds of it comes from the Gl.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsSep 8th, 2024

Kuo: Apple’s 5G modems to ‘grow rapidly’ in coming years to replace Qualcomm

Apple’s years-long effort to replace Qualcomm’s 5G modems with its own chips is nearing an end. Previously, Ming-Chi Kuo has indicated Apple’s first in-house 5G modems will debut in select 2025 iPhones. Today, he shares his expectation for Appl.....»»

Category: gadgetSource:  9to5macRelated NewsSep 6th, 2024

Just how dangerous is Great Salt Lake dust? New research looks for clues

As Utah's Great Salt Lake shrinks, exposing more of its playa, concerns grow about the dust the dry lakebed emits. But scientists lack the data to fully understand what pollutants are present in these airborne sediments......»»

Category: topSource:  theglobeandmailRelated NewsSep 6th, 2024

Column: Digital retailing transformation means some will lose, disappear as efficiencies grow

St. Charles Toyota is all in on Toyota's SmartPath digital retailing system, and it's transforming the dealership's relations with outside vendors......»»

Category: topSource:  autonewsRelated NewsSep 5th, 2024

Unraveling the evolutionary secrets of how whales and dolphins adapted their backbones for aquatic life

If you've ever seen a dolphin swim, you may have wondered why they undulate their bodies up and down when swimming, instead of side to side as fishes do. Though they have a fishlike body, cetaceans (a group comprised of whales, dolphins, and porpoise.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsSep 5th, 2024

Outer solar system is more populated than previously thought, research reveals

Survey observations using the Subaru Telescope's ultra-widefield prime focus camera have revealed that there may be a population of small bodies further out in the Kuiper Belt waiting to be discovered......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsSep 5th, 2024

Research team designs efficient bioenergy crops that need less water to grow

Drought stress has long been a limiting factor for crop production around the world, a challenge exacerbated by climate change......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsSep 5th, 2024

In defense of slugs

Slugs. They eat your lettuces, chew your cabbages, defoliate your dahlias and assassinate your asters. Even the name "slug" is unpleasant. It comes from the Middle English "slugge", from a Norwegian word for a heavy, slow-moving or sluggish person. S.....»»

Category: topSource:  theglobeandmailRelated NewsSep 4th, 2024

Preventing cell damage: Working principle of proton-activated chloride channels revealed

A research team led by Prof. Seo Byeong-Chang of the Department of Brain Sciences at DGIST has made the world's first discovery of how proton-activated chloride (PAC) channels—which play an important role in protecting cells in our bodies—work. P.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsSep 3rd, 2024