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vkbh How smoker s breath saved this caterpillar s life
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  via Choi + Shine  55-105-ft  17-32 m  high plyons, designed by Dietmar Koering, 2009  via Dezeen  Superstring, by Yong ho Shin, 2010  via ArchDaily  A design by Youssef Ghali, 2011 A woman, by Elena Paroucheva  via GRID Expo  P193, designed by Amec, with Pick Everard, 2011 Migrant Mast, designed by Rever  038; Drage Architects, Norway, 2011  viaGRID Expo and Rever  038; Drage  Flower Tower, by Gustafson Porter, 2011  via Wired  P205, by New Town Studio, 2011 Clown-shaped towers in 脷jharty谩n, Hungary, 2011  via Designrulz and Skyscraper City  P197, by Knight Architects, Roughan  038;  stanley nz O ; Donovan and ESB International with MEGA, 2011 P113 AL_A Pylon, designed by AL_A  038; Arup, 2011 Deer and human figures, by the Moscow-based DesignDepot, 2012  via DesignDepot  The Land of Giants: Giants of the Wind, by Choi + Shine, 2012  via Choi + Shine  The 148 ft  45 m  high robot, designed by DOMA, Argentina, 2012  via Onliner  ___ The images above are from RIBA, except when noted otherwise.                                                        Architecture                                                                                                                                                                                             stanley usa                   Daily Newsletter                                                                                                                        You May Also Like              stanley romania                                                          Nwgb We Saw Syfy   s Super Weird Angel Drama Dominion, And We Kind Of Love It
 which is published in last week   PLoS ONE: Although glass electrodes are widely used for intracellular recordings, novel electrodes with super stanley cup ior mechanical and electrical properties are desirable, because they could extend intracellular recording methods to challenging environments, including long term recordings in freely behaving animals. Carbon nanotubes demonstrate high electrical conductance  which makes them great for recording neuronal activity , remarkable mechanical strength  so they won ;t snap off inside your brain  and electrochemical stability. They also play nice with biological tissues. Until now, however, carbon nanotube probes have been too short or wide to be of any use to researchers who would use them to monitor neuronal activity. No longer. The probe designed by Yoon and his colleagues measures between just 5 and 10 micrometers wide 鈥?about the diameter of a red blood cell. And yet, it   roughly a mil stanley cups limeter long, and could, in theory, be made even longer. Tech Review   Susan Young has details on the research team   demonstration of the device: The team was able to detect small changes in electrical activity in the cell鈥攃hanges corresponding to the input signals the neuron was receiving from o stanley cups uk ther neurons. An average cortical neuron can receive signals from around 10,000 other neurons, says Richard Mooney, a neuroscientist at Duke University and an author on the study.  Individually, those generate very small s