scientists关键词检索结果

Start-up reveals ‘artificial egg’ to resurrect extinct birds, but scientists say the work misses the point

Start-up reveals ‘artificial egg’ to resurrect extinct birds, but scientists say the work misses the point

消除灭绝的科学并不存在,但 Colossal Biosciences 的“人造卵”是一项有趣的技术壮举

TPU scientists are developing a “reverse exoskeleton” for the rehabilitation of patients after a stroke

Ученые ТПУ разрабатывают «экзоскелет наоборот» для реабилитации пациентов после инсульта

托木斯克理工大学信息技术和机器人工程学院发展副主任弗拉基米尔·古宾 (Vladimir Gubin) 表示,托木斯克理工大学的科学家们正在开发一种机器人综合体,用于无法行动的患者的康复。

Artists and Scientists Partner to Bring Atmospheric Data to Life

Artists and Scientists Partner to Bring Atmospheric Data to Life

In the fluxART project, scientists using eddy covariance to study atmospheric flux partnered with artists to help communicate the “breath of the biosphere.”

Scientists discover why gold doesn’t ‘rust’

Scientists discover why gold doesn’t ‘rust’

黄金不会像类似金属那样变色。一篇新论文称,关键在于其原子复杂的“人字形”图案。

发现的骨头和牙齿宝藏为老挝百年“死亡罐子”之谜提供了新线索

A Discovered Trove of Bones and Teeth Yields New Clues to the Century-Old Mystery of 'Death Jars' in Laos

Scientists found bones of 37 people inside a giant stone jar at one of Southeast Asia’s most puzzling archaeological sites. The find suggests a multigenerational burial practice

Scientists Find Thousands of Cubic Kilometers of Magma Hiding Beneath Tuscany

Scientists Find Thousands of Cubic Kilometers of Magma Hiding Beneath Tuscany

我们已经知道托斯卡纳艳阳下是什么。现在,一种称为环境噪声断层扫描的技术使研究人员能够看到托斯卡纳地壳深处的情况。

Scientists of BSTU named after V.G. Shukhov 开发了一个拟人机器人项目

Ученые БГТУ имени В.Г. Шухова разработали проект антропоморфного робота

这所旗舰大学开发了一种基于拟人机器人的自动化综合体,用于执行标记和控制操作。减轻管道零件获取时的劳动强度。

历史上最著名的哈雷彗星可能需要一个新名字,真正的发现者是一位无人知晓的和尚

History's most famous Halley's comet may need a new name, and the real discoverer was a monk nobody ever heard of

Halley’s Comet naming controversy is reshaping astronomy history after new medieval research revealed a forgotten discovery from nearly 1,000 years ago. Researchers from Leiden University say English monk Eilmer of Malmesbury may have recognized Halley’s Comet as a repeating object centuries before