Science | malaria 'Star Wars' Scientists Take Aim at Mosquitoes Anti-malaria Weapons of Mosquito Destruction can zap bugs 100ft away with lasers By Rob Quinn Posted Mar 14, 2009 4:06 AM CDT Copied New anti-malaria projects are finding novel ways to combat mosquitoes, including lasers, poisoned blood, and weapons that disrupt the senses mosquitoes use to find their human prey. (AP Photo/USDA) Rocket scientists who worked on ways to beat Soviet missiles a generation ago are now using their lasers to zap mosquitoes, the Wall Street Journal reports. Researchers looking for ways to combat malaria have rejigged "Star Wars" technology to create a contraption that can pick off individual mosquitoes from 100 feet away. They believe the technology could someday protect entire villages. Malaria kills a million people a year, but efforts to eradicate it were lagging until researchers recently got a fresh injection of cash from big donors like Bill Gates. Now the scientists who tried to help end the Cold War are “just trying to make a dent in a war that's actually gone on a lot longer and claimed a lot more lives,” says one astrophysicist. Read These Next The Air Force has changed its tune on Ashli Babbitt. Open that wallet big time for a trip to Disney, if you can afford it. Minneapolis shooter had a plan—and grievances. A 'tense' clash with RFK Jr. led to CDC chief's trouble. Report an error