NCSA 30 | 2006 March
0
archive,date,ajax_updown_fade,page_not_loaded,,tactile-ver-1.8.1, vertical_menu_background_opacity,smooth_scroll,wpb-js-composer js-comp-ver-4.11.2.1,vc_responsive

March 2006

NCSA researcher simulates entire life form

It's a simple little virus—so simple that biologists often refer to it as a "particle" rather than organism, so small and primitive that it can only proliferate in a cell that's already been hijacked by another virus. But a recent simulation of the satellite tobacco mosaic virus is also a striking first. There's never been a computer simulation of an entire life form at atomic...

Read More
Cookie Settings