From the content broadcast on October 26.
– Researchers at MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) have built a small implantable device containing insulin-producing cells. The advantage of the device, which is the size of half a dollar, is that it also produces oxygen from water vapor in the body, and this protects the cells from destruction. In previous attempts, the transplanted cells died quickly due to lack of oxygen. The system, which has been well-tested in animal trials, may be a long-term solution for insulin-dependent diabetics. Adam Tabak, Professor of Diabetes, Semmelweis University
A laser chip that diagnoses the properties of laser light was developed at the Wegener Physics Research Center under the leadership of laser physicist Peter Dombey. The results were published in a very prestigious international journal. Peter Dombey is a former student and colleague of Nobel laureate Ferenc Krauss. We also talk about how the laser chip relates to Cross’s atomic physics, and what “the Master” had to say about these findings.
– The world’s first patented Hungarian testing system for predicting gestational diabetes – Dora Jerzy, Obstetrician-Gynecologist, Esther Horvath, Researcher in Physiology, Semmelweis University
Explorer – About the World of Science – Radio Kossuth – Thursday, October 262:34 p.m
Editor: Julia James
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