A seemingly subtle swap of metals—substituting a zinc ion with a cobalt ion—and a mutation ramps up the overall electric field strength at the active site of an enzyme, scientists find. The result is a predictably modified enzyme that works an astonishing 50 times faster than its unmodified analog.
What is white hydrogen? Scientists say the clean-energy gas could save the world.
For the First Time, Scientists Have Fired Up the World's Smallest Particle Accelerators