All in all, the research showed that
different mechanical interactions among bacteria can determine the architecture of biofilms.
Not exact matches
Supersymmetric models posit that every fundamental particle of the standard model (the particles that we know exist — electrons, quarks, and so on) has a partner — a particle with similar
interactions but
different quantum
mechanical properties.
Using ultrafast lasers, they found that the
interaction between the sun's energy and the chlorophyll molecules in a bacterium relies on a piece of quantum
mechanical weirdness known as superposition, where a single photon's energy can temporarily be in many
different states at once.