Science
Finding their comfort zone – EurekAlert
A Mason Engineering researcher has discovered that artificial microswimmers accumulate where their speed is minimized, an idea that could have implications for…
IMAGE: Jeff Moran headshot
view more
Credit: Courtesy photo
A Mason Engineering researcher has discovered that artificial microswimmers accumulate where their speed is minimized, an idea that could have implications for improving the efficacy of targeted cancer therapy.
Jeff Moran, an assistant professor of mechanical engineering in the Volgenau School of Engineering, and colleagues from the University of Washington in Seattle studied self-propelled half-platinum/half-gold rods that “swim” in…
-
General14 hours agoMildura man given 28 years to pay $73,000 in unpaid fines and tolls
-
General17 hours agoAustralia’s race to rewire the country amid a global transmission boom is not unique
-
General21 hours agoPrincess Diana enters Paris waxwork museum in ‘revenge dress’
-
General15 hours agoGold Coast and Noosa councils scammed out of ratepayers’ money
