Using robots and click chemistry, scientists built potential active ingredients for future antibiotics that contain metal.
The nearly 30-year tale of secalosides A and B began in 1997, when natural product chemists identified them as components of rye pollen extract. Although the compounds were inactive in lab tests with ...
When the object now known as 3I/ATLAS was flagged by automated sky surveys, it first looked like another distant icy body ...
Rivers deliver freshwater, nutrients, and carbon to Earth's oceans, influencing the chemistry of coastal seawater worldwide.
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Futuristic nuclear fuel shape mimics nature to dramatically improve performance
At the intersection of mathematics and nature, scientists have found intriguing and often beautiful designs. Pinecone scales ...
Paris summit warns about “mirror life.” Scientists call for early limits on mirror bacteria that could evade defenses and ...
Members of a new class of antivirals are being tested in U.S. clinical trials, and one has gained approval in Japan, but how ...
Using a blend of computer modeling, structural and cell-based studies, scientists at The Wertheim UF Scripps Institute have ...
A new study from UCSD and international collaborators reports five promising molecules that could lead to antiviral ...
Solid-State Materials in Pharmaceutical Chemistry: Properties, Characterization, and Applications, 2nd Edition (ISBN: ...
A 100-Year-Old Chemistry Law Just… BROKE. Turns Out, Science Books We Trusted Might Need Major Edit!
The research concerned the formation of anti-Bredt olefins, or ABOs, proving that several kinds of ABOs can be made.
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