All posts tagged: Invents

Nobel prize winner invents machine that pulls water from dry air

Nobel prize winner invents machine that pulls water from dry air

The desert doesn’t look like it has anything to give. Then night falls, the air cools, and a quiet trickle of water begins to gather. That is the basic promise behind a new hand-held atmospheric water harvester built at UC Berkeley. It is a device that captures water molecules from air at night, then uses only ambient sunlight during the day to release that moisture and condense it into drinkable water. In tests in Death Valley National Park, one of the hottest and driest places in North America, the system kept working through wide temperature swings. It also functioned well with very low humidity. “Almost one-third of the world’s population lives in water-stressed regions. The UN projects in the year 2050 that almost 5 billion people on our planet will experience some kind of water stress for a significant part of the year,” said Omar Yaghi, a Berkeley chemistry professor who leads the work and is known for inventing metal-organic frameworks, or MOFs. “This is quite relevant to harnessing a new source for water.” The …

Uncles Tremble as Man Invents Vaccine Delivered by Beer

Uncles Tremble as Man Invents Vaccine Delivered by Beer

We have some bad news for your conspiracy-brained antivaxxer uncle — one virologist claims he’s come up with a way to administer vaccines through a frothy mug of beer. By day, virologist Chris Buck works for the National Cancer Institute (NCI) in Maryland, where he’s discovered four of the 13 polyomaviruses we know to affect humans, Science News reports. But by night, he runs Gusteau Research Corporation, a one-man shell company he established so he could experiment on his bubbly inoculation: an ingestible polyomavirus vaccine. To make the beer, Buck engineered a special strain of yeast infused with polyomavirus-like particles. Similar particles, delivered via purified insect chitin, have successfully increased antibody levels in rhesus monkeys tested in India, according a 2023 research study published in the journal Vaccine. Importantly, Buck’s engineered yeast doesn’t contain live viruses. Consensus among researchers is that they aren’t viable for building ingestible vaccines, as they would simply disintegrate when they make contact with stomach acids, per Science News. Yet when the virologist and his team attached virus-like particles to live …