Rather than building ever-larger Coriolis, vortex or ultrasonic sensors, engineers can use smaller measuring paths and combine their outputs to accurately measure flow in large-diameter pipelines.
Our body contains an intricate system of tiny vessels through which blood, water and other molecules flow. When the size of the pipes shrinks to the nanoscale, where only a few molecules can fit side ...
There’s early optimism Haverhill can install a bypass line sooner than first expected and possibly end sewage discharge ...
The same family of artificial intelligence that powers today's image generators is now being aimed at one of biology's ...
Matīss Kaža, producer and co-writer of Gints Zilbalodis' animated feature Oscar winner "Flow," has boarded "Insectarium" ...
Crews hit the road this week to create a database of conditions at culverts and other manmade structures in Northwest Indiana ...
Biomedical engineers at Duke University have developed a technique to noninvasively visualize the brain's waste-removal system in unprecedented detail. This new imaging approach allows researchers to ...
Researchers at the University of Massachusetts Amherst are using eye-tracking technology to help understand how nurses ...
Milwaukee is building a massive underwater storage facility in Lake Michigan, just south of the Summerfest grounds, to store toxic PCB sediment.
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