Control's collection of resources to help with digital twin education and implementation, from Aveva, Nvidia and more ...
Most materials, especially metals and ceramics, are crystals. Their atoms are arranged in three-dimensional lattices that repeat the same exact pattern, over and over again. But there's a well-known ...
To model bacterial life, Thornburg and his colleagues turned to one of its simplest examples: a bacterial cell with a ...
What governs the speed at which raindrops fall, sediment settles in river estuaries, and matter is ejected during a supernova? These questions circle around one, deceitfully simple factor: the rate at ...
A simulated cell in the early stages of division. Left half shows membrane (green cubes), and ribosomes (yellow/purple) interwoven through in the cell’s chromosome (red). Right side shows all the ...
A remarkably small bacterium containing fewer than 500 genes serves as the basis for one of the most detailed digital life ...
Millions of people in health care, workplace safety and emergency response roles globally are required to complete credentialed resuscitation training on a recurring basis, often while balancing ...
A machine-learning model trained on fewer than 300 molecules has flagged diatomic pairs with record-high electric dipole ...
A new study shows how humans moved across the landscapes of ancient Greece, shaped by slope, visibility, and rugged terrain.
Quantum AI may become the most consequential technology in human history. Yet it feels like someone else's problem to us. That instinct may be our greatest liability.
Security operations rarely fail because of a lack of tools. They fail because the operating model never kept pace with the tooling. The stack grows. Alerts increase. The board asks sharper questions.