单词:tetramethylphenylenediamine
单词:tetramethylphenylenediamine 相关文章
AS IT IS 2016-10-01 Report: Smoking May Permanently Damage Genetic Material 报告称吸烟或永久性损伤你的遗传物质 Here is another reason to not light up a cigarette. Smoking can permanently damage your genetic material, according to a n
Many of the Burgess specimens have now been assigned to living phyla just where Walcott put them in the first place. 许多布尔吉斯标本现在已经归到活着的动物的门里就是沃尔科特最初放置它们的地方。 Hallucigenia and s
This is Scientific Americans 60-Second Science. Im Cynthia Graber. This will just take a minute. Saliva contains many useful components: lubricants, enzymes for breaking down food and now compounds that can reveal a persons age. Thats according to a
This is Scientific Americans 60-Second Science. Im Steve Mirsky. Got a minute? To keep your car purring, you have to change the oil. Such maintenance produces eight billion gallons of used motor oil annually. Some waste oil does get re-refined to pro
This is Scientific American Sixty Seconds Science, I'm Sophie Bushwick, got a minute? When Mexican tetra fish moved into darker caves long ago, they evolved to deal with the dark by becoming albino and going blind. A new research shows that the chang
Ever get a sour stomach after your morning coffee? Well, you might end up switching to a dark roastbecause that coffee concoction may leave you with a happier tummy. That's according to the research presented at the American Chemical Society meeting
Fun Fact: Alligators Can Regrow Teeth 有趣的事实:短嘴鳄可以再长牙齿 Fun fact about alligators: they can regrow any of their eighty teeth up to fifty times. Which is pretty impressive, especially compared to us relatively dentally chal
You may have heard that humans and chimpanzees have something like 96 percent of our DNA in common. So why, then, are diseases like cancer so common in humans but so rare in chimps? If our DNA is nearly identical, shouldnt we be at risk for many of t
its time again for the A Moment of Science mailbag. A listener writes: Dear A Moment of Science, Ive always been fascinated by volcanoes. So I was wondering: How well can scientists predict when and where a volcano will erupt? Intersting question. Th
T Tanshinone IIA 丹参酮IIA Tanshinone I 丹参酮I Tanshinone IIB 丹参酮IIB Taraxasterol 蒲公英甾醇 Taraxerol 蒲公英赛醇 Tauro ursodesoxy cholic acid 牛磺熊去氧胆酸 Taxifolin 花旗
M Madasiatic acid 崩大碗酸 Magnoflorine 木兰花碱 Magnolia cortex P.E 厚朴提取物 Magnolol 厚朴酚 Maitake mushroom P.E 灰树花提取物(舞茸提取物) Malonyl Oleanolic acid Hemi
AGRICULTURE REPORT - Restrictions on Methyl Bromide By Mario Ritter Broadcast: Tuesday, March 16, 2004 This is Steve Ember with the VOA Special English Agriculture Report. Graphic Image Some chemicals
This is Scientific American's 60-Second Science. I am Steve Mirsky.Got a minute? Talk about your vicious cycles. A new study finds that belly fat could be making you hungrier. Which would lead to more belly fat. The research was performed at the Univ
Algae seem harmless enough. These precursors to plants thrive throughout the world's waters. But these single-celled plants have global consequences. We can thank them for oxygen in the atmosphere, oil in the lithosphere as well as dead zones in the
By Caty Weaver Broadcast: September 12, 2003 This is Bob Doughty with the VOA Special English Environment Report. Scientists in the United States have reported some good news about the 1)ozone in the
Science and Technology Epigenetics and stress Baby blues 科技 外因遗传与压力 新生儿蓝调曲 A mother's stress while she is pregnant can have a long-lasting effect on her children's genes 母亲孕期压力过大会对孩子的基因造成长
Body Clock Provides Clues to Aging 生物钟提供衰老的线索 If youre searching for the fountain of youth, you might find it in your DNA. Thats according to a new study that sheds light on the biological clock ticking in our genomes, why our bod
WASHINGTON, Aug. 4 (Xinhua) -- Researchers have found a way to turn mouse embryonic stem cells into sperm and this finding opens up new avenues for infertility research and treatment, according to astudy published Thursday in the online edition of jo
10 Getting The Lead Out 第十章 把铅撵出去 In the late 1940s, a graduate student at the University of Chicago named Clair Patterson (who was, first name notwithstanding, an Iowa farm boy by origin) was using a new method of lead isotope measur