Our website uses cookies. They help us understand how customers use our website so we can give you the best experience possible. By continuing to browse this site or choosing to close this message, you give consent for cookies to be used. The cookies are not used for advertising. This applies to visitors from EU.

Neelansh Bhartiya

Posts: 50    

5 points you should know about LAF

5 points you should know about LAF

Neelansh Bhartiya 29/01/2017 3
1. LAF uses High-Efficiency Particulate Air filters. These filters are considered the heartbeat of the lamina flow hood. Their retention ability is so high to retain particles of 0.3 micrometers in diameter. This translates to 99.99 percent efficienc...
Read More
Engineered intrinsically disordered proteins provide biomedical insights

Engineered intrinsically disordered proteins provide biomedical insights

Neelansh Bhartiya 12/02/2017 0
Biomedical researchers have engineered the first examples of biomimetic structures composed from a mysterious class of proteins that lack any sort of internal structure. Researchers reveal the ability to control the self-assembly and disassembly of t...
Read More
When Present joins hands with Past…!

When Present joins hands with Past…!

Neelansh Bhartiya 12/02/2017 0
A new technique to increase the speed of medical tests has been developed by combining cutting-edge nanoscience with a magnetic phenomenon discovered more than 170 years ago.This combination technique—created by Researchers at the University of Centr...
Read More
Flexible sensor might one day be a heart monitor for decades

Flexible sensor might one day be a heart monitor for decades

Neelansh Bhartiya 28/02/2017 0
During surgery, a heartbeat doesn’t just tell whether a person is dead or alive— it can warn of big problems that come up quite suddenly. Keeping watch for subtle irregularities in the heart’s electric activity can help save a patient’s life but toda...
Read More
A low-power artificial synapse could one day interface with the brain

A low-power artificial synapse could one day interface with the brain

Neelansh Bhartiya 28/02/2017 0
A team based at Stanford University and at Sandia National Laboratories, in Livermore, Calif., have created a new form of “artificial synapse” that may one day be used to create flexible circuitry that could directly interface with the brain.The new ...
Read More