STEM News

Weizmann Institute of Science research shows heterogeneity in melanoma tumors prevents effective immune responses.

The new technology allows AI to identify molecular features of cancer cells based on biopsy images.

In a new study, Israeli researchers at the Technion make a case for using DNA as part of a viable, long-term solution to storing our digital libraries as well as the incredible amount of data created every day by humans and machines.

A new method, developed by scientist at Weizmann Institute, uncovered some fateful cellular decisions right at the beginning of embryonic development.

Researchers at Hebrew U hopeful their breakthrough may help women extend their fertility windows and maintain high egg quality into their thirties and forties.

The method may be used to purify drugs and numerous other chemicals.

In groundbreaking research, Tel Aviv University academics discover changes to mass spawning events that may lead to extinction of some species of reef builders.

Watch Dr. Itamar Harel, Principal Investigator at Hebrew University, as he conducts fascinating research on age-related diseases at his new lab.

Technion researchers have developed a technology to purify water that has been tainted by formaldehyde, using a type of processed natural clay and a formaldehyde-linked bacterium.

The shrimp could be the key to successfully reducing poverty, helping the environment and controlling schistosomiasis outbreaks, according to BGU.

Scientists have discovered a mass die-off that took place two billion years ago—with up to 99.5 percent of life on Earth disappearing.

Be it creating ways for access to clean water, contributing ways to improve renewable energy for a more sustainable future or even creating 3D hearts, engineers are the future to solving many of the world’s global challenges.

Israeli crystallographer Ada Yonath – whose pioneering work on the structure of the ribosome won her the Nobel Prize in 2009 – has one advice for women struggling to make a mark in STEM.

As if the black holes were not mysterious enough, astronomers using NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope have found an unexpectedly thin disk of material that swirls furiously around a supermassive black hole.