News

Scientists record the sound of a single bacterium’s motion

Scientists record the sound of a single bacterium’s motion

SALON | Thanks to a relatively new material, known as graphene, scientists were able to amplify frequencies of such nanomotion, which individual bacteria emit, and reproduce audio recordings. Via an ultra-thin bilayer membrane of graphene — the latest “spyware,” so-to-speak, in a decades-long arms race against antibacterial-resistant “superbugs” — they were able to rapidly distinguish living and deceased bacteria in a laboratory culture.

Full Story