The research team found that millions of bacteria floating in tiny fog droplets are alive, growing and breaking down ...
Fog itself is not alive, of course. But new research suggests some fog droplets can briefly become tiny floating habitats, ...
The ratio of water to microbial life in fog rivals that of oceans and lakes, new research has found. Sounds gross, but it's ...
Scientists discovered that fog droplets can host living bacteria that grow and help remove harmful pollutants from the atmosphere, revealing fog as a surprisingly active microbial environment.
For decades, Susquehanna University’s Derek Straub has studied what is suspended in fog — the microscopic particles and ...
A new study finds fog droplets can hold millions of bacteria. Here’s how that compares to Florida’s humid air.
Fog may look empty and gray, but scientists say it's more like a floating, living bacterial community. In a two-year study of ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Fog continues to affect visibility in the Bay Area, with temperatures varying significantly due to a strong inversion, while a ...
Fog arises when water vapour condenses into minute liquid droplets suspended in the air near the surface, markedly reducing visibility. Its formation depends on the interplay of thermodynamic, ...