A parasitic worm uses static electricity to launch itself onto flying insects, a mechanism uncovered by physicists and ...
Taking flight: a parasitic roundworm prepares to jump on its host (courtesy: Victor M. Ortega-Jimenez) Researchers in the US ...
A tiny worm that leaps high into the air—up to 25 times its body length—to attach to flying insects uses static electricity ...
Microscopic parasitic worms use static electricity to pull themselves toward flying insects, turning physics into a powerful ...
Daily Mail on MSN
Static electricity causes tourists' hair to stand up at desert
‘He did it again!’: Blue Jays fans react to Guerrero’s home run in Game 3 ...
New Jersey's wind-heavy energy goals hit repeated stumbles under Gov. Phil Murphy despite advances in solar and some other ...
This chip factory's purification project includes 1 exterior view and 6 internal renderings of a class 10,000 cleanroom, ...
In China, the longest ultrahigh-voltage power line stretches more than 2,000 miles from the far northwest to the populous ...
Launched in May by the China Science and Technology Museum in Beijing, the Southern Xinjiang Science Caravan Tour brings ...
Fashion Glamp on MSN
From Ancient Fish Shocks to Modern Grids: Unpacking the Mind-Blowing History and Core Concepts of Electricity!
Imagine a world without the glow of your screen, the hum of your fridge, or the instant communication across continents.
CNN on MSN
Sparks between microscopic bubbles could explain the ghostly, glowing will-o’-the-wisps, study finds
Flashes of microlightning between microscopic bubbles of methane in water may ignite the eerie blue flames of will-o’-the ...
Chemists have discovered tiny zaps of electricity moving between “swamp-gas” bubbles. Could they ignite methane gas to glow as dancing blue flames?
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