Search results for sweat

If you don't like getting needles or working out, this new medical wearable may be for you. It analyzes sweat instead of blood, and it doesn't require patients to generate that sweat by performing strenuous exercises.Continue ReadingCategory: Medical, ScienceTags: KIST, Northwestern University, Sweat sensor, Wearable
How do you protect hypersonic vehicles from the high temperatures of over 2,200 °C (4,000 °F) encountered when flying in excess of Mach 5? According to the RTX Technology Research Center, the answer is to make them sweat.Continue ReadingCategory: Aircraft, TransportTags: Hypersonic, Aircraft
When someone is using antipsychotic drugs, it is vitally important that they take the correct dosage, and that they don't abruptly stop taking the medication. Soon, a fingerprint sweat test could be used to check that such people are following instructions.Continue ReadingCategory: Health & Wellbeing, LifestyleTags: University of Surrey, Drugs, Medication, Fingerprint
Designer Alice Potts has created a collection of baseball caps covered in crystals grown from the sweat of the people who have worn them. Read more
There are plenty of jackets out there with adjustable vents, but virtually all of them require that you manually open the vents when you run hot – not necessarily convenient when you're in rhythm on a run. With its all-new Aerogami running jacket, Nike experiments with a more intuitive, seamless form of venting. Without the need for a battery pack or any electronics, the jacket's vents automatica
Researchers have developed a wearable, noninvasive sensor that monitors for a biomarker of inflammation in the wearer’s sweat. They say the device could be used at home by people with chronic inflammatory diseases.Continue ReadingCategory: Medical, ScienceTags: Wearable, wearable electronics, Inflammatory, Sensor, Caltech
for her recent series, the biomaterial specialist asked eight people to wear a cap while going about their daily activities before she crystallized their sweat with salt solution. The post on alice potts’ wearable hats, liters of human sweat crystallize and mutate like frozen gems appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.


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