Experimental Shock-Absorbing Material Can Stop Projectiles Travelling Over 4,828 km/h - Gizmodo Australia
A team of researchers from the University of Kent in Canterbury, England, have used a protein called talin, which functions...
A team of researchers from the University of Kent in Canterbury, England, have used a protein called talin, which functions as the cells natural shock absorber, to create a new shock-absorbing materi… [+3182 chars]
Read More
Other Stories in Science
- Is there a reason to use a woodruff key instead of a straight key.
- Is there a reason to use a woodruff key instead of a straight key.
- Revolutionary Sweetness with Arto Sucrose-Reduced Technology Reduces the Sugar in Fruits by up to 65% and Increases Prebiotics to Embrace the Healthy Food Trend
- Revolutionary Sweetness with Arto Sucrose-Reduced Technology Reduces the Sugar in Fruits by up to 65% and Increases Prebiotics to Embrace the Healthy Food Trend
- How to Prevent Duplicate Item Entries Inside a Parent-Child Form Relationship in AppSheet?
- Who would win in a fight between 100 men and 1 gorilla? An evolutionary expert weighs in
- Facebook isn’t eavesdropping, but the truth is more disturbing
- Google-parent Alphabet quarterly earnings lifted by cloud and AI
- Why the Giants traded up for Jaxson Dart in the 2025 NFL Draft, and what he needs to improve