But now, a team of Stanford University scientists has finally found an agent that can reversibly make skin transparent ...
Researchers at Stanford University made the skin of mice transparent using the yellow no. 5 food dye, otherwise known as ...
Tartrazine, a dye used in making Doritos, has a light-absorbing quality that researchers used to apply to mice so they could ...
Stanford University researchers have discovered that tartrazine, a yellow-orange food dye found in Doritos, can make mouse ...
FD&C Yellow 5 is found in many foods, including soda, candy, chips, and pastries – including Doritos, says the product's website. Yet people should not go rubbing dyes on themselves just yet, said ...
Doritos might be known for spicing up snack time, but Stanford researchers have discovered that a dye in the chips can also ...
Scientists at Stanford University recently claimed that a dye that helps to give Doritos chips their orange hue can turn a ...
Dr. Guosong Hong, an assistant professor at Stanford and senior author of the paper, the outcome was surprising.
The researchers applied a mixture of water and tartrazine to the skin of live mice, which eventually turned transparent.
The capacity to briefly make skin translucent could offer a variety of benefits in biology, diagnostics and even cosmetics.
Scientists have achieved a groundbreaking technique to view inside the body using a common yellow food dye found in Doritos.
6 issue of the journal Science, how they were able to see through the skin of live mice by applying a mixture of water and tartrazine, a bright yellow-orange food coloring used in Doritos and ...