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Scientists have found a way to make mouse skin temporarily transparent by using a common food dye. A team led by Zihao Ou, Assistant Professor of Physics at the University of Texas at Dallas, applied a solution containing tartrazine, a yellow food colouring, to the skull and abdomen of live mice. This allowed them to observe the internal organs and blood vessels of the animals without performing any surgery. Once the dye solution was removed, the skin returned to its normal state without harming the mice.

Optical Physics Behind the Process

The transparency of the skin is achieved by a combination of water and the food-colouring tartrazine, also known as FD&C Yellow No. 5. The dye alters the skin’s refractive index, allowing light to pass through more easily by reducing light scattering. This process allows the skin to become see-through in a manner similar to how fog dissipates.

Observing Organs and Brain Function

Researchers used the dye to observe blood vessels just beneath the skull, along with the mouse’s internal organs and muscle contractions in the abdomen. The process does not involve incisions or any physical damage to the skin or bones, making it a groundbreaking tool for biomedical research. The transparency appears within minutes, similar to how facial creams work by diffusing molecules into the skin.

Future Applications of the Technique

The breakthrough could revolutionise fields such as biomedical imaging and healthcare, providing non-invasive ways to observe internal body structures. If successful in humans, it could be used in medical procedures like blood draws by making veins more visible. This study, conducted at Stanford University, highlights a significant step forward in medical research.

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Scientists Propose Space Missions to Chase Down Interstellar Comets

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A Southwest Research Institute study reveals that chasing interstellar comets like 3I/ATLAS is achievable with current rockets and instruments. Such missions could collect data on comet nuclei and comae, providing clues to the formation of other star systems. International collaborations make these rare, high-value missions increasingly realistic.

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Iceland Plume Discovery Reveals Ancient Volcanic Funnels Across North Atlantic

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Sixty million years ago, Iceland’s deep plume fueled massive eruptions across the North Atlantic. Cambridge scientists discovered hidden weak zones in Earth’s crust that funneled the plume’s heat, explaining volcanic fields like the Giant’s Causeway. These ancient scars still shape today’s earthquakes and geothermal energy across Britain and Ireland.

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Astronomers Discover Rogue Black Hole Racing Through a Distant Dwarf Galaxy

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Astronomers have discovered a rogue intermediate-mass black hole speeding through a dwarf galaxy 230 million light-years away. Unlike typical galactic centres, this displaced object is accreting material and blasting out jets, suggesting black holes can grow “offsite”. The finding offers rare evidence of elusive intermediate black holes and may help explain how su…

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