This week just may have brought the biggest development in the science of bug splatter in more than a decade. This week just may have brought the biggest development in the science of bug splatter in ...
Trials began Wednesday at Shreveport Regional Airport for a research project being conducted by NASA Research in Langley and Boeing. The project, called the Insect Accretion Mitigation, is testing ...
October 9, 2009 – If you have ever taken a long road trip, the windshield of your car will inevitably be splattered with bugs by the time you arrive at your destination. Could the DNA left behind be ...
When bugs explode against the wings of oncoming airplanes, they create a sticky problem for aerospace engineers. “A bug doesn’t know that it’s been catastrophically destroyed,” says Emilie J. (Mia) ...
NASA and Boeing are in Shreveport testing a bug-phoebic material for airplane wings. Lynn Kimsey, an entomologist in Shreveport this week on a NASA and Boeing project testing bug-phoebic materials for ...
NASA’s been studying the way bugs splatter for years. Those gooey speckles of black and red might be gross to you, but to aerospace engineers, they’re a riddle that’s plagued the industry for decades.
Love bugs may finally be good for something other than attracting each other. For the owner of a 26-foot sport fisherman, they provided evidence that his boat had been taken from its stall at a ...
If you have ever taken a long road trip, the windshield of your car will inevitably be splattered with bugs by the time you arrive at your destination. Could the DNA left behind be used to estimate ...
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